Abstract

The rates of oxygen uptake and oxygen transfer during cell growth and citric acid production by Candida lipolytica Y 1095 were determined. The maximum cell growth rate, 1.43 g cell/L x h, and volumetric oxygen uptake rate, 343 mg O(2)/L x h, occurred approximately 21 to 22 h after inoculation. At the time of maximum oxygen uptake, the biomass concentration was 1.3% w/v and the specific oxygen uptake rate was slightly greater than 26 mg O(2)/g cell x h. The specific oxygen uptake rate decreased to approximately 3 mg O(2)/g cell x h by the end of the growth phase.During citric acid production, as the concentration of dissolved oxygen was increased from 20% to 80% saturation, the specific oxygen uptake and specific citric acid productivity (mg citric acid/g cell x h) increased by 160% and 71%, respectively, at a biomass concentration of 3% w/v. At a biomass concentration of 5% w/v, the specific oxygen uptake and specific citric acid productivity increased by 230% and 82%, respectively, over the same range of dissolved oxygen concentrations.The effect of dissolved oxygen on citric acid yields and productivities was also determined. Citric acid yields appeared to be independent of dissolved oxygen concentration during the initial production phase; however, volumetric productivity (g citric acid/L x h) increased sharply with an increase in dissolved oxygen. During the second or subsequent production phase, citric acid yields increased by approximately 50%, but productivities decreased by roughly the same percentage due to a loss of cell viability under prolonged nitrogen-deficient conditions.

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