Abstract
Using a series of pH controlled batch fermentations operated in a fed-batch mode and adaptation and selection techniques where pH and acetic acid provided the selective pressures, we isolated a culture of Clostridium thermoaceticum that can grow and produce acetic acid at pH 4.5. At pH 4.5 the fastest mass doubling time was 36 h, and the highest acetic acid concentration reached was 4.5 g/liter. Generally, as the pH was decreased from 6.0 and the initial acetic acid concentration increased, the mass doubling time increased, and the final acetic acid concentration decreased. These observations can be explained in terms of inhibition by the free acetic acid concentration at a given pH, relative to the total acetic acid concentration (free acid plus acetate ion). We have thus reached one of the criteria determined by us to be required for an economically viable fermentation acetic acid process, i.e., pH 4.5. A second requirement for a mass doubling time of about 7 h (0.1/h dilution rate) can probably be reached by selection in continuous culture. The final requirement for an acetic acid concentration of 50 g/liter will be the most difficult to achieve in view of the organism's sensitivity to low concentrations of free acetic acid.
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Selected References
These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.
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