227 research outputs found

    Control Implementation in Bioprocess System: A Review.

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    Bioprocess control consists of establishing a strategy for the management of the biocatalyst environment. Bioprocesses include several different units in which a near optimal environment is desired for microorganisms to grow, multiply, and produce a desired product

    Online Intelligent Controllers for an Enzyme Recovery Plant: Design Methodology and Performance

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    This paper focuses on the development of intelligent controllers for use in a process of enzyme recovery from pineapple rind. The proteolytic enzyme bromelain (EC 3.4.22.4) is precipitated with alcohol at low temperature in a fed-batch jacketed tank. Temperature control is crucial to avoid irreversible protein denaturation. Fuzzy or neural controllers offer a way of implementing solutions that cover dynamic and nonlinear processes. The design methodology and a comparative study on the performance of fuzzy-PI, neurofuzzy, and neural network intelligent controllers are presented. To tune the fuzzy PI Mamdani controller, various universes of discourse, rule bases, and membership function support sets were tested. A neurofuzzy inference system (ANFIS), based on Takagi-Sugeno rules, and a model predictive controller, based on neural modeling, were developed and tested as well. Using a Fieldbus network architecture, a coolant variable speed pump was driven by the controllers. The experimental results show the effectiveness of fuzzy controllers in comparison to the neural predictive control. The fuzzy PI controller exhibited a reduced error parameter (ITAE), lower power consumption, and better recovery of enzyme activity

    Current State and Perspective in the Models Applicable to Oenology

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    Modeling, simulation, and control of the alcoholic fermentation of grape juice into wine are still not a totally resolved problem. A model that makes it possible to predict alcoholic fermentation development would be a valuable instrument to its technical and economical implications. Considering the field of bioprocess used in food production at the industrial scale, the chapter will be centered on models applicable to oenology. On the first part, the chapter proposes the different approaches that have been taken: “knowledge-based” models, non-physiological mathematical descriptions, behavior prediction models, and empirical models. The second part will deal with a nonlinear model for white wine alcoholic fermentation process which, besides the detailed kinetic model, involves equations corresponding to the physiological phases of yeast cells, the inhibitory effect of ethanol, heat transfer equations, and the dependence of kinetic parameters on temperature

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    This paper focuses on the development of intelligent controllers for use in a process of enzyme recovery from pineapple rind. The proteolytic enzyme bromelain (EC 3.4.22.4) is precipitated with alcohol at low temperature in a fed-batch jacketed tank. Temperature control is crucial to avoid irreversible protein denaturation. Fuzzy or neural controllers offer a way of implementing solutions that cover dynamic and nonlinear processes. The design methodology and a comparative study on the performance of fuzzy-PI, neurofuzzy, and neural network intelligent controllers are presented. To tune the fuzzy PI Mamdani controller, various universes of discourse, rule bases, and membership function support sets were tested. A neurofuzzy inference system (ANFIS), based on Takagi-Sugeno rules, and a model predictive controller, based on neural modeling, were developed and tested as well. Using a Fieldbus network architecture, a coolant variable speed pump was driven by the controllers. The experimental results show the effectiveness of fuzzy controllers in comparison to the neural predictive control. The fuzzy PI controller exhibited a reduced error parameter (ITAE), lower power consumption, and better recovery of enzyme activity

    Process analytical technology in food biotechnology

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    Biotechnology is an area where precision and reproducibility are vital. This is due to the fact that products are often in form of food, pharmaceutical or cosmetic products and therefore very close to the human being. To avoid human error during the production or the evaluation of the quality of a product and to increase the optimal utilization of raw materials, a very high amount of automation is desired. Tools in the food and chemical industry that aim to reach this degree of higher automation are summarized in an initiative called Process Analytical Technology (PAT). Within the scope of the PAT, is to provide new measurement technologies for the purpose of closed loop control in biotechnological processes. These processes are the most demanding processes in regards of control issues due to their very often biological rate-determining component. Most important for an automation attempt is deep process knowledge, which can only be achieved via appropriate measurements. These measurements can either be carried out directly, measuring a crucial physical value, or if not accessible either due to the lack of technology or a complicated sample state, via a soft-sensor.Even after several years the ideal aim of the PAT initiative is not fully implemented in the industry and in many production processes. On the one hand a lot effort still needs to be put into the development of more general algorithms which are more easy to implement and especially more reliable. On the other hand, not all the available advances in this field are employed yet. The potential users seem to stick to approved methods and show certain reservations towards new technologies.Die Biotechnologie ist ein Wissenschaftsbereich, in dem hohe Genauigkeit und Wiederholbarkeit eine wichtige Rolle spielen. Dies ist der Tatsache geschuldet, dass die hergestellten Produkte sehr oft den Bereichen Nahrungsmitteln, Pharmazeutika oder Kosmetik angehöhren und daher besonders den Menschen beeinflussen. Um den menschlichen Fehler bei der Produktion zu vermeiden, die Qualität eines Produktes zu sichern und die optimale Verwertung der Rohmaterialen zu gewährleisten, wird ein besonders hohes Maß an Automation angestrebt. Die Werkzeuge, die in der Nahrungsmittel- und chemischen Industrie hierfür zum Einsatz kommen, werden in der Process Analytical Technology (PAT) Initiative zusammengefasst. Ziel der PAT ist die Entwicklung zuverlässiger neuer Methoden, um Prozesse zu beschreiben und eine automatische Regelungsstrategie zu realisieren. Biotechnologische Prozesse gehören hierbei zu den aufwändigsten Regelungsaufgaben, da in den meisten Fällen eine biologische Komponente der entscheidende Faktor ist. Entscheidend für eine erfolgreiche Regelungsstrategie ist ein hohes Maß an Prozessverständnis. Dieses kann entweder durch eine direkte Messung der entscheidenden physikalischen, chemischen oder biologischen Größen gewonnen werden oder durch einen SoftSensor. Zusammengefasst zeigt sich, dass das finale Ziel der PAT Initiative auch nach einigen Jahren des Propagierens weder komplett in der Industrie noch bei vielen Produktionsprozessen angekommen ist. Auf der einen Seite liegt dies mit Sicherheit an der Tatsache, dass noch viel Arbeit in die Generalisierung von Algorithmen gesteckt werden muss. Diese müsse einfacher zu implementieren und vor allem noch zuverlässiger in der Funktionsweise sein. Auf der anderen Seite wurden jedoch auch Algorithmen, Regelungsstrategien und eigne Ansätze für einen neuartigen Sensor sowie einen Soft-Sensors vorgestellt, die großes Potential zeigen. Nicht zuletzt müssen die möglichen Anwender neue Strategien einsetzen und Vorbehalte gegenüber unbekannten Technologien ablegen

    Modelling Acetification with Artificial Neural Networks and Comparison with Alternative Procedures

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    Modelling techniques allow certain processes to be characterized and optimized without the need for experimentation. One of the crucial steps in vinegar production is the biotransformation of ethanol into acetic acid by acetic bacteria. This step has been extensively studied by using two predictive models: first-principles models and black-box models. The fact that first-principles models are less accurate than black-box models under extreme bacterial growth conditions suggests that the kinetic equations used by the former, and hence their goodness of fit, can be further improved. By contrast, black-box models predict acetic acid production accurately enough under virtually any operating conditions. In this work, we trained black-box models based on Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) of the multilayer perceptron (MLP) type and containing a single hidden layer to model acetification. The small number of data typically available for a bioprocess makes it rather difficult to identify the most suitable type of ANN architecture in terms of indices such as the mean square error (MSE). This places ANN methodology at a disadvantage against alternative techniques and, especially, polynomial modelling

    Development of monitoring and control systems for biotechnological processes

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    The field of biotechnology represents an important research area that has gained increasing success in recent times. Characterized by the involvement of biological organisms in manufacturing processes, its areas of application are broad and include the pharmaceuticals, agri-food, energy, and even waste treatment. The implication of living microorganisms represents the common element in all bioprocesses. Cell cultivations is undoubtedly the key step that requires maintaining environmental conditions in precise and defined ranges, having a significant impact on the process yield and thus on the desired product quality. The apparatus in which this process occurs is the bioreactor. Unfortunately, monitoring and controlling these processes can be a challenging task because of the complexity of the cell growth phenomenon and the limited number of variables can be monitored in real-time. The thesis presented here focuses on the monitoring and control of biotechnological processes, more specifically in the production of bioethanol by fermentation of sugars using yeasts. The study conducted addresses several issues related to the monitoring and control of the bioreactor, in which the fermentation takes place. First, the topic concerning the lack of proper sensors capable of providing online measurements of key variables (biomass, substrate, product) is investigated. For this purpose, nonlinear estimation techniques are analyzed to reconstruct unmeasurable states. In particular, the geometric observer approach is applied to select the best estimation structure and then a comparison with the extended Kalman filter is reported. Both estimators proposed demonstrate good estimation capabilities as input model parameters vary. Guaranteeing the achievement of the desired ethanol composition is the main goal of bioreactor control. To this end, different control strategies, evaluated for three different scenarios, are analzyed. The results show that the MIMO system, together with an estimator for ethanol composition, ensure the compliance with product quality. After analyzing these difficulties through numeric simulations, this research work shifts to testing a specific biotechnological process such as manufacturing bioethanol from brewery’s spent grain (BSG) as renewable waste biomass. Both acid pre-treatment, which is necessary to release sugars, and fermentation are optimized. Results show that a glucose yield of 18.12 per 100 g of dried biomass is obtained when the pre-treatment step is performed under optimized conditions (0.37 M H2SO4, 10% S-L ratio). Regarding the fermentation, T=25°C, pH=4.5, and inoculum volume equal to 12.25% v/v are selected as the best condition, at which an ethanol yield of 82.67% evaluated with respect to theoretical one is obtained. As a final step, the use of Raman spectroscopy combined with chemometric techniques such as Partial Least Square (PLS) analysis is evaluated to develop an online sensor for fermentation process monitoring. The results show that the biomass type involved significantly affects the acquired spectra, making them noisy and difficult to interpret. This represents a nontrivial limitation of the applied methodology, for which more experimental data and more robust statistical techniques could be helpful

    Data validation and missing data reconstruction using self-organizing map for water treatment

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    Applications in the water treatment domain generally rely on complex sensors located at remote sites. The processing of the corresponding measurements for generating higher-level information such as optimization of coagulation dosing must therefore account for possible sensor failures and imperfect input data. In this paper, selforganizing map (SOM)-based methods are applied to multiparameter data validation and missing data reconstruction in a drinking water treatment. The SOM is a special kind of artificial neural networks that can be used for analysis and visualization of large high-dimensional data sets. It performs both in a nonlinear mapping from a high-dimensional data space to a low-dimensional space aiming to preserve the most important topological and metric relationships of the original data elements and, thus, inherently clusters the data. Combining the SOM results with those obtained by a fuzzy technique that uses marginal adequacy concept to identify the functional states (normal or abnormal), the SOM performances of validation and reconstruction process are tested successfully on the experimental data stemming from a coagulation process involved in drinking water treatment

    Sensors and Techniques for On-Line Determination of Cell Viability in Bioprocess Monitoring

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    In recent years, the bioprocessing industry has experienced significant growth and is increasingly emerging as an important economic sector. Here, efficient process management and constant control of cellular growth are essential. Good product quality and yield can only be guaranteed with high cell density and high viability. Whereas the on-line measurement of physical and chemical process parameters has been common practice for many years, the on-line determination of viability remains a challenge and few commercial on-line measurement methods have been developed to date for determining viability in industrial bioprocesses. Thus, numerous studies have recently been conducted to develop sensors for on-line viability estimation, especially in the field of optical spectroscopic sensors, which will be the focus of this review. Spectroscopic sensors are versatile, on-line and mostly non-invasive. Especially in combination with bioinformatic data analysis, they offer great potential for industrial application. Known as soft sensors, they usually enable simultaneous estimation of multiple biological variables besides viability to be obtained from the same set of measurement data. However, the majority of the presented sensors are still in the research stage, and only a few are already commercially available
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