Abstract

Thermodynamic analysis is an important part of chemical engineering. However, its application in biotechnology has been hampered by lack of data on thermodynamic properties of microorganism biomass. In this paper, a review was made of methods for estimation of thermodynamic properties of biomass, including standard enthalpy of combustion hC⁰, enthalpy of formation hf⁰, entropy s⁰, and Gibbs free energy of formation gf⁰. These parameters were calculated on molar and mass specific basis for 32 microorganism species, including 14 bacteria, 7 yeast and 11 algae species. It was found that hf⁰, s⁰, gf⁰ are, respectively, similar for all the analyzed species, due to the fact that all living organisms have a common ancestor and thus a similar chemical composition. Furthermore, all the analyzed microorganisms have negative hf⁰, originating from partial oxidation of all other elements by oxygen and nitrogen. A brief review was given of microorganism endogenous and growth metabolic rates. Finally, based on the determined thermodynamic properties, entropy of individual E. coli and Pseudomonas cells were determined and entropy of a Pseudomonas colony during its lifespan was calculated and analyzed. Three periods can be distinguished in the existence of a microorganism colony: (a) accumulation period when cell number, mass and entropy increase, (b) steady state period when they are approximately constant, and (c) decumulation period when they decrease.

Highlights

  • Animate matter represents a highly organized, self-assembled amount of substance clearly separated by a semipermeable membrane from its environment (Morowitz, 1992)

  • The discussion turns to estimating entropy of dry microorganism biomass from its elemental composition, using the Battley equation

  • The methods reviewed are used to find thermodynamic properties of dry microorganism biomass

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Animate matter represents a highly organized, self-assembled amount of substance clearly separated by a semipermeable membrane from its environment (inanimate matter) (Morowitz, 1992). An organism is characterized by cellular structure that corresponds to a thermodynamic system (Morowitz, 1955; Schro€dinger, 2003; von Bertalanffy, 1950; Balmer, 2010; Popovic, 2017a, 2018, Demirel, 2014). Animate matter represents an open system (von Bertalanffy, 1950). The seven fundamental characteristics of life are: (1) ordered cell structure, (2) reproduction, (3) growth and development, (4) energy utilization, (5) response to the environment, (6) homeostasis, and (7) evolutionary adaptation (Campbell and Reece, 2002). An organism represents a growing open system due to accumulation of matter and energy (Popovic, 2017b). Animate matter performs thermodynamic processes corresponding to biological (life) processes

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call