fermenters
produce
antibiotics
fuels
proteins
what is it
big container
liquid culture medium
microorganisms grow / reproduce
right conditions needed
food = liquid culture (pumped in)
Air = oxygen supply
right temperature
respiration ---> heat
cooling jacket
right pH
sterile conditions
prevent contamination
motorised stirrer (paddles)
stop microorganisms sinking to bottom
Mycoprotein
food from fermenter
edible biomass
meat substitute
vegetarian meals
quorn
low in fat
protein from fungu
single celled protein
fungus = Fusarium
fermenter
glucose syrup
derived from digested maize starch using enzymes
aerobic respiration of fungus
oxygen supplied
nitrogen supplied
ammonia
sterilised
use steam
prevents other microorganism growth
incoming nutrients
sterilised
air supply filtered
developing counties
protein hard to find
animals
lots of space
food
grass
miroorganisms
little space
feed in waste material
animals can't do this
penecillin
mould in fermenter
Penicillium chrysogenum
grow in liquid culture sugar + nutrients (nitrogen)
sugar used as mould grows
most of nutrients used
penicillin produced
Alexander Fleming (1928)
antibiotic
Subtopic 3
Fuels
oil / gas running out
bacteria / yeast
anaerobic respiration
ethanol
anearobic fermentation of sugar
glucose ---> ethanol + CO2 + energy
sugar cane juices
maize starch
use action of carbohydrase enzyme
gives glucose
distill ethanol
brazil
gasohol
mixture ethanol + petrol
cars
biogas
anaerobic fermentation of waste material
biodigesters or generator
constant temperature
respiration
batch gnerator
small batches
manually loaded with waste
left to digest
by-products cleared away at end of each session
continuous gnerator
biogas all the time
steady rate
waste continually fed in
large scale biogas projects
consideration for design
cost
continuous > batch
convenience
batch < continuous
efficiency
35C
insulation
solar heaters
no leaks
position
smell
away from homes
close to waste source
carbohydrates
plant animal waste
sludge waste
sewage works
sugar factories
70% methane (CH4), 30% CO2
not stored as liquid
too high pressure needed
use straight away
heating
power turbine
generate electricity
use to power street lights in London
large scale
used in some countries
small scale
sources
human waste
keeping pigs
food waste
village or family
by-products
fertilise crops
fertilise gardens
economic / environmental effects
greener
alternative to fossil fuels
CO2 neutral
only release that which was taken
less harmful byproducts
sulphur dioxide
nitrogen oxides
acid rain
methane
greenhouse gas
from untreated waste
spread in agricultural land
fertiliser
burn
not released into atmospher
raw material
cheap
readily available
digested material
better fertiliser than undigested dung
grow more crops
developing rural communities
save time collecting wood for fuel
generators
act as waste disposal system
animal waste
human waste
otherwise would cause
disease
water pollution