Abstract

AbstractIn this work, an immobilization method for polymer‐levan production by a non‐flocculating Z mobilis culture was developed. The extent of cell attachment to the stainless steel wire surface, culture growth and product synthesis were described. It was established that during short‐term passive immobilization of non‐flocculation Z mobilis cells on a stainless steel wire surface, sufficient amounts of biomass for proper levan and ethano fermentation could not be obtained. Adherence of cells was improved by pressing the paste‐like biomass within stainless steel spheres knitted from wire with subsequent dehydration. Biomass fixed in metal spheres was used for repeated batch fermentation of levan. The activation period of cells within wire spheres (WS) was 48 h in duration. During this time, cell growth stabilized at production levels of ethanol and levan of Qeth = 1.238 g/l × h and qeth = 0.47 g/l × h; Qeth = 0.526 g/l × h and qeth = 0.20 g/l × h. Five stable fermentation cycles were realized using one wire sphere inoculum, and maintaining a stable ratio of 2.4 of biomass suspended in the medium to biomass fixed in the sphere. Using fixed Z mobilis biomass in the WS, the total amount of inoculum could be reduced for batch fermentation. Large plaited wire spheres with biomass may have potential in fermentation in viscous systems, including levan production.

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