15,608 research outputs found
Biosurfactants – potential and applications
Biosurfactants are molecules that exhibit pronounced surface and emulsifying activities, produced by a
variety of microorganisms. A host of interesting features of biosurfactants, such as higher
biodegradability, lower toxicity, and effectiveness at extremes of temperature, pH and salinity; have
led to a wide range of potential applications in the fields of oil recovery, environmental bioremediation,
food processing and medicine. In spite of the immense potential of biosurfactants, their use still
remains limited, possibly due to their high production and extraction costs, low yields in production
processes and lack of information on their toxicity towards human systems [1]. The use and potential
commercial application of biosurfactants in the medical field has increased during the past decade [2].
Their antibacterial, antifungal and antiviral activities make them relevant molecules for applications in
combating many diseases and as therapeutic agents. In addition their role as anti-adhesive agents
against several pathogens indicates their utility as suitable anti-adhesive coating agents for medical
insertional materials leading to a reduction of a large number of hospital infections without the use of
synthetic drugs and chemicals. The most promising alternative to turn its production competitive for
industrial applications is the knowledge of the genes involved in their biosynthesis. Identification and
isolation of those genes will allow enhanced production. Furthermore, modification of those genes by
genetic engineering will result in the production of novel biosurfactants with specific novel properties.
Medicinal and therapeutic perspectives of biosurfactants applications and future research plans will be
presented
Biosurfactants production from cheese whey
Biosurfactants are molecules that exhibit
pronounced surface and emulsifying activities,
produced by a variety of microorganisms. A host of
interesting features of biosurfactants, such as higher
biodegradability, lower toxicity, and effectiveness at
extremes of temperature, pH and salinity; have led to
a wide range of potential applications in the fields
of oil recovery, environmental bioremediation, food
processing and medicine. In spite of the immense
potential of biosurfactants, their use still remains
limited, mainly due to their high production and
extraction costs, low yields in production processes and lack of information on their toxicity towards human systems. However, the
use of cheaper substrates and optimal growth and production conditions
coupled with novel and efficient multistep downstream processing methods and
the use of recombinant and mutant hyper producing microbial strains can
make biosurfactant production economically feasible. Often, the amount and
type of a raw material can contribute considerably to the production cost; it is
estimated that raw materials account for 10 to 30% of the total production
costs in most biotechnological processes. Thus, to reduce this cost it is
desirable to use low-cost raw materials. One possibility explored extensively is
the use of cheap and agro-based raw materials as substrates for biosurfactant
production. A variety of cheap raw materials, including plant-derived oils, oil
wastes, starchy substances, cheese whey and distillery wastes have been
reported to support biosurfactant production. Future biosurfactant research
should, therefore, be more focused on the economics of biosurfactant
production processes, particularly through the use of alternative low-cost
fermentative media. This review looks at the future perspectives of large-scale
profitable production of biosurfactants
G\"odel-type Spacetimes in Induced Matter Gravity Theory
A five-dimensional (5D) generalized G\"odel-type manifolds are examined in
the light of the equivalence problem techniques, as formulated by Cartan. The
necessary and sufficient conditions for local homogeneity of these 5D manifolds
are derived. The local equivalence of these homogeneous Riemannian manifolds is
studied. It is found that they are characterized by three essential parameters
, and : identical triads correspond to
locally equivalent 5D manifolds. An irreducible set of isometrically
nonequivalent 5D locally homogeneous Riemannian generalized G\"odel-type
metrics are exhibited. A classification of these manifolds based on the
essential parameters is presented, and the Killing vector fields as well as the
corresponding Lie algebra of each class are determined. It is shown that the
generalized G\"odel-type 5D manifolds admit maximal group of isometry
with , or depending on the essential parameters ,
and . The breakdown of causality in all these classes of homogeneous
G\"odel-type manifolds are also examined. It is found that in three out of the
six irreducible classes the causality can be violated. The unique generalized
G\"odel-type solution of the induced matter (IM) field equations is found. The
question as to whether the induced matter version of general relativity is an
effective therapy for these type of causal anomalies of general relativity is
also discussed in connection with a recent article by Romero, Tavakol and
Zalaletdinov.Comment: 19 pages, Latex, no figures. To Appear in J.Math.Phys.(1999
Diagnosing numerical Cherenkov instabilities in relativistic plasma simulations based on general meshes
Numerical Cherenkov radiation (NCR) or instability is a detrimental effect
frequently found in electromagnetic particle-in-cell (EM-PIC) simulations
involving relativistic plasma beams. NCR is caused by spurious coupling between
electromagnetic-field modes and multiple beam resonances. This coupling may
result from the slow down of poorly-resolved waves due to numerical (grid)
dispersion and from aliasing mechanisms. NCR has been studied in the past for
finite-difference-based EM-PIC algorithms on regular (structured) meshes with
rectangular elements. In this work, we extend the analysis of NCR to
finite-element-based EM-PIC algorithms implemented on unstructured meshes. The
influence of different mesh element shapes and mesh layouts on NCR is studied.
Analytic predictions are compared against results from finite-element-based
EM-PIC simulations of relativistic plasma beams on various mesh types.Comment: 31 pages, 20 figure
Isolation of microorganisms from oil samples for application in microbial enhanced oil recovery
Este resumo faz parte de: Book of abstracts of the Meeting of the Institute for Biotechnology and Bioengineering, 2, Braga, Portugal, 2010. A versão completa do livro de atas está disponível em: http://hdl.handle.net/1822/1096
Biosurfactant-producing Bacillus subtilis strains isolated from crude oil samples enhance oil recovery at lab scale
Biosurfactant-producing Bacillus subtilis strains isolated from crude oil samples enhance oil recovery at lab scale
Eduardo J Gudiña, Lígia R. Rodrigues, José A. Teixeira
IBB-Institute for Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Centre of Biological Engineering, University of Minho, Campus de Gualtar, 4710-057 Braga, Portugal
Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery (MEOR) is potentially useful to increment oil recovery from reservoirs beyond primary and secondary recovery operations using microorganisms and their metabolites. Stimulation of bacterial growth and biosurfactant production by indigenous microorganisms can reduce the capillary forces that retain the oil into the reservoir. MEOR offers major advantages over conventional EOR, namely low amounts of energy consumption and independence of the price of crude oil [1]. In this work, a sand pack column model was designed to simulate the oil recovery operations in oil reservoirs and evaluate the mobilization of residual oil. Three Bacillus subtilis strains, previously isolated from crude oil samples [2], were used. Those strains grow and produce extracellular biosurfactants at 40ºC under anaerobic conditions in medium supplemented with hydrocarbons. Biosurfactants produced reduce the surface tension of water from 72 to 30 mN/m, exhibit emulsifying activity and are not affected by exposure to high temperatures (121ºC) which makes them good candidates for application in biosurfactant mediated MEOR. Sand pack column assays were performed using paraffin and crude oil. Additional oil recovery using paraffin ranged from 19 to 35% with the different isolates. When crude oil was used as hydrocarbon, the isolates recovered between 19 and 21% of the entrapped oil. The results obtained suggest that stimulation of biosurfactant production by these strains in situ can contribute to mobilize entrapped oil and improve the oil fluidity.
[1] Sen R, “Biotechnology in petroleum recovery: The microbial EOR”, Progress in Energy and Combustion Science (2008) 34: 714-724.
[2] Gudiña EJ, Pereira JFB, Rodrigues LR, Coutinho JAP, Teixeira JA, “Isolation and study of microorganisms from oil samples for application in Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery”, International Biodeterioration and Biodegradation (2012) 68: 56-64
Causal Anomalies in Kaluza-Klein Gravity Theories
Causal anomalies in two Kaluza-Klein gravity theories are examined,
particularly as to whether these theories permit solutions in which the
causality principle is violated. It is found that similarly to general
relativity the field equations of the space-time-mass Kaluza-Klein (STM-KK)
gravity theory do not exclude violation of causality of G\"odel type, whereas
the induced matter Kaluza-Klein (IM-KK) gravity rules out noncausal
G\"odel-type models. The induced matter version of general relativity is shown
to be an efficient therapy for causal anomalies that occurs in a wide class of
noncausal geometries. Perfect fluid and dust G\"odel-type solutions of the
STM-KK field equations are studied. It is shown that every G\"odel-type perfect
fluid solution is isometric to the unique dust solution of the STM-KK field
equations. The question as to whether 5-D G\"odel-type non-causal geometries
induce any physically acceptable 4-D energy-momentum tensor is also addressed.Comment: 16 page. LaTex file. To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys. A (1998
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