Abstract

This paper proposes and analyzes a mathematical model for the production of bioethanol in a continuous bioreactor with recycling. The kinetics correspond to the use of Saccharomyces bayanus for the fermentation of sugars found in wastewater from soft drinks. The proposed model considers product growth latency, which was experimentally found in batch studies of ethanol production. Furthermore, the inhibition effect of ethanol is expressed by a modified version of the classical Andrew’s model for substrate inhibition. The proposed model consists of only three ordinary differential equations containing a minimal number of operating parameters, which include the bioreactor residence time, glucose feed concentration, recycle ratio and the fraction of biomass removed from the reactor by the flow. The positivity and the boundedness of solutions of the model were confirmed under reasonable restrictions of parameters. The stability analysis showed that there is a value of residence time at which an exchange of stability occurs between the trivial washout and non-washout solutions. This critical value depends only on the substrate feed concentration, biomass death rate, recycle ratio and purge fraction. Dynamic simulations of the model were carried out for substrate concentration in the range of 100–250 g/L, commonly used for the production of ethanol. An inverse response due to the inhibition effects of ethanol was observed in the time evolution of substrate and biomass concentrations. Parametric studies showed that ethanol concentration increases with the recycle ratio, with the inverse of residence time and with the inverse of purge fraction. The effect of ethanol latency has, on the other hand, a substantial effect on ethanol concentration. Despite its unstructured nature and the fact that some parameters such as temperature and acidity were not taken into consideration, the proposed model managed to provide useful results on the bioreactor-settler stability and the effect of key parameters on its dynamic behavior, which could pave the way for future optimization studies.

Highlights

  • The stability analysis of the steady state solutions yielded an analytical expression for the critical residence time at which a stability exchange between washout and non-trivial solution occurs

  • We observed that this critical value of residence time is dependent on the feed substrate concentration, purge fraction and the recycle ratio

  • It was found that the maximum ethanol concentration is obtained at the maximum allowable recycle ratio, the smallest purge fraction and largest dilution rate

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental pollution issues are pushing scientists and industrialists to search for alternatives to fossil fuels [1]. Ethanol extracted from suitable renewable sources is carbon friendly and an attractive green energy to control environmental contamination and reduce dependence on petrifaction and fossilized carbon energy [4,5]. Ethanol is one of the most efficient and attractive substitutes for fuels, either when blended with gasoline or used as a fuel-ethanol. It has received attention for its use as an oxygenate for the control of automotive tailpipe emissions

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