Factors For Deciding The Extraction Method
Factors For Deciding The Extraction Method
Factors For Deciding The Extraction Method
The value of the final product. The degree of purity required to make the final product acceptable, bearing in mind its revenue-yielding potential. The chemical and physical properties of the product. The location of the product in the mixture i.e. whether it is free within the medium or is cell-bound. The location and properties of the impurities. The cost-effectiveness of the available alternate isolation procedures.
Filtration
1.The rotary vacuum filter:
Consists of a hollow rotating cylinder divided into four partitions and covered with a metal or cloth gauze. A vacuum is applied in the cylinder and as it rotates the vacuum sucks liquid materials from the shallow trough in which the rotating cylinder is immersed. For thick slurries which are difficult to filter (e.g. aminoglycoside broths) a thin layer of filter aid (e.g. Kiesselghur) is first allowed to be absorbed on the cylinder.
Later the filter cylinder with its thin coating of the filter aid is allowed to rotate in the trough in which the broth is now placed. The rotating cylinder, the vacuum still on, is washed with a sprinkle of water; a knife whose edge is positioned just short of the layer of filter aid scrapes off the solids picked up from the broth. When it is used for easily filtered broth such as in penicillin broth no filter aid is used. Instead an arrangement of strings coupled with a release of the vacuum in the segment of the cylinder helps release the material picked up from the broth.
Horizontal
Vertical
Centrifugation
Centrifuge when filtration is not a satisfactory separation method. Although expensive when compared with a filter it may be essential when: 1. Filtration is slow and difficult. 2. The cells or other suspended matter must be obtained free of filter aids. 3. Continuous separation to a high standard of hygiene is required.
In the enzyme isolation industry, however, centrifugation is preferred to filtration, probably because unwanted cell debris are quite efficiently removed by this method. A large number of centrifuges are available in the market and a new fermentation industry or a change in the production method of old processes may require the use of centrifuges for primary separation.
4. Foam Fractionation
The principle of foam fractionation is that in a liquid foam system the chemical composition of a given substance in the bulk liquid is usually different from the chemical composition of some substance in the foam. Foam is formed by sparging the bulk liquid containing the substance to be fractionated with an inert gas. The gas is fed at the bottom of a tower and the foam created overflows at the top carrying with it the solutes to be fractionated. This method has been used to collect a wide range of microorganisms and although mainly experimental it may be used on a large scale in industry.
5.Whole-broth Treatment
acetonebutanol fermentation, the whole unseparated broth is stripped of its content of the required product. Antibiotics streptomycin (using cationicexchange resin) and novobiocin (on an anionic resin.) The antibiotics are eluted from the resins and then crystallized. This process saves the capital and recurrent expense of the initial separation of solids from the broth.
Mechanical Methods
i) Homogenizers. The method is applied mainly for the release of intracellular molecules. ii) Ball Mills In a ball mill, cells are agitated in suspension with small abrasive particles. The beads disrupt the cells to release biomolecules. iii) Ultrasonic disruption. It is expensive and is used mainly in laboratories.
Non-mechanical methods
(i) Chemical Permeabilization. with organic solvents that act by the creation of canals through the cell membrane: toluene, ether, phenylethyl alcohol or antibiotics (ii) Mechanical Permeabilization. One method of mechanical permeabilization is osmotic shock. The cells equilibrate internal and external osmotic pressure in a high sucrose medium, and then rapidly diluting away the sucrose. The resulting immediate overpressure of the cytosol is assumed to damage the cell membrane. (iii) Enzymatic Permeabilization. This method is often limited to releasing periplasmic or surface enzymes. Firstly EDTA is used then enzymes as: beta(1-6) and beta(1-3) glycanases, proteases, and mannase.
Liquid Extraction
Also known as solvent extraction, or liquidliquid extraction It is used to transfer a solute from one solvent into another in which it is more soluble.
Dissociation Extraction
A special case of liquid-liquid extraction. Many fermentation products are either weak bases or acids. When solvent extraction is employed the pH is so selected that the material to be isolated is unionized since the ionized form is soluble in the aqueous phase and the unionized form is soluble in the solvent phase. Weak bases are therefore extracted under high pH conditions and weak acids under low pH conditions. The result is a rapid and complete extraction of the solute and materials similar to it.
Ion-exchange Adsorption
Ionic filtrates of fermentation broths can be purified and concentrated using ion exchange resins packed in columns. An ion exchange resin is a polymer (normally polystyrene) with electrically charged sites at which one ion may replace another.
Precipitation
It is particularly useful in the elimination of proteinaceous impurities or in the isolation of enzymes. Salts are precipitated by one of several methods: Adding inorganic salts and (or) Reducing the solubility with the addition of organic solvents such as alcohol in the case of enzymes. Lactate and oxalate salts of erythromycin have been so isolated Citric acid has been isolated with its calcium salt.
PURIFICATION. 3
1. Chromatography (Adsorption, partition, ion-exchange, gel filtration and affinity chromatography) 2. Carbon Decolorization 3. Crystallization
PRODUCT ISOLATION
The final isolation of the product is done in one of the two following ways: Processing of crystalline products. Drying of products direct from solution.
Crystalline Processing
Crystalline products are free-filtering and noncompressible and therefore may be filtered on thick beds under high pressure. This is usually done on a centrifugal machine capable of developing very high (about 1,000 fold) gravitational force. The crystals are washed to remove adhering mother liquor. After washing they are dried by spinning for further drying or solvent removal.
Drying
Drying consists of liquid removal (either organic solvent or water) from wet crystals such as was described above from a solution, or from solids or cells isolated from the very earliest operation. Drying can be considered under two heads: (i) liquid-phase moisture removal, and (ii) solid-phase moisture removal.
i) Tray Driers(
The most commonly used in some fermentation industries is the vacuum tray drier. It consists simply of heated shelves in a single cabinet which can be vacuum evacuated. As it can be evacuated, heating at fairly low temperature is possible and hence it is useful for heat-labile materials.