Title: Bioseparations engineering
1Bioseparations engineering
- Definition Recovery, isolation, purification and
polishing of products synthesized by
biotechnological processes - Extended definition Final polishing steps of
processes such as biotechnology based effluent
treatment and water purification
Bioproduct/s
Upstream processing
Downstream processing
Bioreaction
Impurities
2Why do we need bioseparation?
- Enrichment of target product
- Reduction in bulk
- Removal of specific impurities
- Enhancement of product stability
- Achievement of product specifications
- Prevention of product degradation
- Prevention of catalysis other than the type
desired - Prevention of catalyst poisoning
3Challenges in bioseparations engineering
- Low product concentration concentrations
- Large number of impurities,
- Thermolabile bioproducts.
- Narrow operating pH and ionic strength window
- Shear sensitivity of bioproducts
- Low solubility of bioproducts in organic solvents
- Instability of bioproducts in organic solvents
- Stringent quality requirements
- Percentage purity
- Absence of specific impurities
An ideal bioseparation process should combine
high throughput with high selectivity, and should
ensure stability of product.
4Biological products
5Biological products (contd..)
6A good bioseparation process
- Ensures desired purity of product
- Ensures stability of product
- Keeps cost low
- Is reproducible
- Is scalable
- Meets regulatory guidelines
7Economic importance of bioseparation engineering
Cost of bioseparation
8Strategies for bioseparation
- A large number of bioseparation methods are
available - The strategy is based on how best these can be
utilized for a given separation - The following need to be taken into account
- The volume of process stream
- The relative abundance of the product in this
process stream - The intended use of the product, i.e. purity
requirements - The cost of the product
- Stability requirements
9Conventional strategy The RIPP scheme
- Recovery, isolation, purification and polishing
- Based on a logical arrangement of bioseparation
methods - Low-resolution, high-throughput techniques (e.g.
precipitation, filtration, centrifugation,
crystallization) are first used for recovery and
isolation - High-resolution techniques (e.g. adsorption,
chromatography, electrophoresis) are then used
for purification and polishing - It is now possible to avoid this RIPP scheme
10Bioseparation methods
- Low resolution-high throughput
- Cell disruption
- Precipitation
- Centrifugation
- Liquid-liquid extraction
- Leaching
- Filtration
- Supercritical fluid extraction
- Microfiltration
- Dialysis
- High resolution-low throughput
- Ultracentrifugation
- Adsorption
- Packed bed chromatography
- Affinity separation
- Electrophoresis
11Bioseparation methods (contd..)
- High resolution-high throughput
- Ultrafiltration
- Fluidized bed chromatography
- Membrane chromatography
- Monolith column chromatography
- In this course we will discuss
- Ultrafiltration
- Membrane chromatography (membrane adsorption)