Abstract

This paper focuses on the design of soft sensors for on-line monitoring of the biotechnological process of biopolymer production, in which biopolymers are accumulated in bacteria as an intracellular energy storage material. The proposed soft sensors for on-line estimation of the biopolymer concentration represent an interesting alternative to the traditional off-line analytical techniques of limited applicability for real-time process control. Due to the complexity of biochemical reactions, which make it difficult to create reasonably complex first-principle mathematical models, a data-driven approach to the design of soft sensors has been chosen in the presented study. Thus, regression methods were used in this design, including multivariate statistical methods (PLS, PCR). This approach enabled the creation of soft sensors using historical process data from fed-batch cultivations of the Pseudomonas putida KT2442 strain used for the production of medium-chain-length polyhydroxyalkanoates (mcl-PHAs). Specifically, data from on-line measurements of off-gas composition analysis and culture medium capacitance were used as input to the soft sensors. The resulting soft sensors allow not only on-line estimation of the biopolymer concentration, but also the concentration of the cell biomass of the production bacterial culture. For most of these soft sensors, the estimation error did not exceed 5% of the measurement range. In addition, soft sensors based on capacitance measurement were able to accurately detect the end of the production phase. This study thus offers an innovative and practically relevant contribution to the field of monitoring of bioprocesses used for the production of medium-chain-length biopolymers.

Highlights

  • The range of applications of soft sensors in the monitoring of industrial production biotechnological processes is increasing proportionally with the increasing demands on the quality of the production processes and the final products

  • In comparison to costly and relatively complex analytical techniques, soft sensors can be a more advantageous solution, in particular for the monitoring of those bioprocesses which are operated as fed-batch cultivations

  • These cultivations are typical for their complex reaction kinetics

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Summary

Introduction

The range of applications of soft sensors in the monitoring of industrial production biotechnological processes is increasing proportionally with the increasing demands on the quality of the production processes and the final products. In comparison to costly and relatively complex analytical techniques, soft sensors can be a more advantageous solution, in particular for the monitoring of those bioprocesses which are operated as fed-batch cultivations. These cultivations are typical for their complex reaction kinetics. Soft sensors can be applied for the monitoring of the process itself, but for the evaluation of the quality of cultivation substrates and microbial cultures used as seed [1,2,3].

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