Abstract

D-Mannitol is a sugar alcohol with applications in chemistry, food and pharmaceutical industries, and medicine. Commercially, mannitol is produced by catalytic hydrogenation. Although this process is widely used, it is not optimal for mannitol production. New processes, including chemical, enzymatic, and microbial processes, are frequently developed and evaluated against the existing hydrogenation processes. In earlier papers, we have described the identification of a food-grade lactic acid bacterium strain, Leuconostoc mesenteroides ATCC-9135, with efficient mannitol production capabilities and the development and optimization of a new bioprocess in which the strain was applied. The new bioprocess is simple. It requires a reduced bioreactor with the following features: sterilization, pH and T control (at mild conditions), and slow mixing. The contamination risk of the new bioprocess is low, and the downstream processing protocol comprises simple, widely used unit operations: evaporation, crystallization, crystal separation, and drying. On a 2-L laboratory scale, high mannitol yields from fructose (93-97%) and volumetric mannitol productivities (>20 g L(-1) h(-1)) were achieved. In this paper, the scalability of the new bioprocess was tested on a small pilot scale (100 L). In the pilot plant, production levels were achieved similar to those in the laboratory. Also, high-purity mannitol crystals were obtained at similar yield levels. The results presented in this paper indicate that the new bioprocess can easily be scaled-up to an industrial scale and that the production levels achieved with it are comparable to the catalytic hydrogenation processes.

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