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Fermentationprocessesandtheirapplication 150211190135 Conversion Gate02 PDF

Fermentation is a process by which microorganisms break down sugars in the absence of oxygen to produce energy. There are two main types of fermentation - alcoholic fermentation which produces ethanol, and lactic acid fermentation which produces lactic acid. Fermentation is used to produce many foods like bread, yogurt, cheese, and beverages like wine. It is also used industrially to produce chemicals like acetone, butanol, ethanol, amino acids, and monosodium glutamate.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
81 views

Fermentationprocessesandtheirapplication 150211190135 Conversion Gate02 PDF

Fermentation is a process by which microorganisms break down sugars in the absence of oxygen to produce energy. There are two main types of fermentation - alcoholic fermentation which produces ethanol, and lactic acid fermentation which produces lactic acid. Fermentation is used to produce many foods like bread, yogurt, cheese, and beverages like wine. It is also used industrially to produce chemicals like acetone, butanol, ethanol, amino acids, and monosodium glutamate.

Uploaded by

Patricia Gabon
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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FERMENTATION PROCESSES AND

THEIR APPLICATION
“fermentation, far from being a lifeless phenomenon, is a
living process…”
- Louis Pasteur
 The Chemistry of Fermentation
- Aerobic & Anaerobic Cellular Respiration
- Glycolysis
- Alcoholic Fermentation
- Lactic Acid Fermentation
Aerobic Cellular Respiration

• Aerobic means “with air”. This type of


respiration needs oxygen for it to occur
so it is called aerobic respiration.
Glucose + Oxygen -> Carbon dioxide + Water + Energy

• The chemical equation is:


C6H12O6 + 6O2 -> 6CO2 + 6H2O + 2900 kj

• 3 stages: -glycolysis
-citric acid cycle
-electron transport chain
Stages of Aerobic Cellular Respiration
• In glycolysis, a net of 2 molecules of
ATP, or chemical energy, are produced.
• The citric acid cycle produces another
2 molecules of ATP
• The electron transport chain produces
28 molecules of ATP.
• Oxygen is used in aerobic cellular
respiration as the final electron
acceptor in the electron transport
chain, which is part of why it's able to
create so much ATP.
But what happens when
oxygen doesn't exist?
Anaerobic Cellular Respiration

• In anaerobic cellular respiration, the


only step of this process that occurs is
glycolysis.
What is fermentation?

• Derived from the Latin verb ‘fervere’


meaning ‘to boil’
What is fermentation?
• It is a process by which the living cell
is able to obtain energy through the
breakdown of glucose
and other simple sugar molecules
without requiring oxygen.
• Fermentation results in the
production of energy in the
form of two ATP molecules,
and produces less energy than
the aerobic process of cellular
respiration .
• Louis Pasteur in the 19th century used
the term fermentation in a narrow
sense to describe the changes brought
about by yeasts and other
microorganisms growing in the absence
of air (anaerobically);
• he also recognized
that ethyl alcohol and
carbon dioxide are
not the only products
of fermentation.
Alcoholic Fermentation
ATP
ATP

Glucose Glycolysis Pyruvic Acid

NAD+ NADH
NAD+ NADH CO2

Ethyl Alcohol Acetaldehyde

Alcoholic fermentation of glucose


C6H12O6 → 2 C2H5OH + 2 CO2
glucose ethanol carbon dioxide
Lactic Acid Fermentation

• In lactic acid fermentation, the pyruvic


acid from glycolysis is reduced to lactic
acid by NADH, which is oxidized to
NAD+. This commonly occurs in muscle
cells. Lactic acid fermentation allows
glycolysis to continue by ensuring that
NADH is returned to its oxidized state
(NAD+).
Lactic Acid Fermentation
The range of fermentation process
There are five major groups of commercially
important fermentations:
(i) Those that produce microbial cells (or biomass) as
the product.
(ii) Those that produce microbial enzymes.
(iii) Those that produce microbial metabolites.
(iv) Those that produce recombinant products.
(v) Those that modify a compound which is added to
the fermentation the transformation process.
THE COMPONENT PARTS OF A FERMENTATION
PROCESS
(i) The formulation of media to be used in culturing the
process organism during the development of the inoculum and
in the production fermenter.
(ii) The sterilization of the medium, fermenters and ancillary
equipment.
(iii) The production of an active, pure culture in sufficient
quantity to inoculate the production vessel.
(iv) The growth of the organism in the production fermenter
under optimum conditions for product formation.
(v) The extraction of the product and its purification.
(vi) The disposal of effluents produced by the process.
Products of Fermentation
The end products of
fermentation differ depending
on the organism.
• lactic acid and lactate, carbon dioxide,
and water – produced from many
bacteria, fungi, protists, and animals
cells (notably muscle cells in the body)
• ethyl alcohol, carbon dioxide, and
water – produced from yeast and most
plant cells
Products of Fermentation
Fermentation products include:

• Food products: from milk (yogurt, kefir, fresh


and ripened cheeses), fruits (wine, vinegar),
vegetables (pickles, sauerkraut, soy sauce),
meat (fermented sausages, salami)
• Industrial chemicals: (solvents: acetone,
butanol, ethanol, enzymes, amino acids)
• Specialty chemicals (vitamins,
pharmaceuticals)
Products of Fermentation
FERMENTATION PROCESSES IN
FOODS
“fermentation, far from being a lifeless phenomenon, is a living
process…”
- Louis Pasteur
Bread
• It is a simple fermentation of sugar to CO2 and alcohol.
• The steps in bread production are (1) preparation of raw
materials; (2) dough fermentation and kneading; (3)
processing of the dough (fermentation, leavening, dividing,
moulding and shaping); (4) baking; (5) final treatments, such
as slicing and packaging.

PROCESS FLOW
Bread

• Baking Soda and Cream of Tartar Reactions:

NaHCO3 + KHC4H4O6 → KNaC4H4O6 + H2O + CO2


Baking soda Cream of tartar Potassium water carbon dioxide
hydrogen tartrate
Yogurt
Yogurt forms when bacteria ferment the sugar
lactose (C12H22O11) into lactic acid (C3H6O3). The
lactic acid makes the milk more acidic (lower
the pH), causing the proteins in milk to
coagulate.

Two bacteria: Streptococcus thermophilus and


Lactobacillus bulgaricus
Yogurt

Process Flow
Cheese

Reaction :
rennet Ca++
casein -------> para-casein (aq) --------> para-casein (ppt)
Cheese

Process Flow
Cheese
Cheese
The breakdown of the lipids in milk yields carboxylic
acids, the source of a range of smelly molecules.
FERMENTATION PROCESSES IN
INDUSTRIAL CHEMICALS
Acetone-Butanol- Ethanol (ABE)
Fermentation
• In acetone-butanol fermentation, acetone and
butanol are produced from glucose using strains of
Clostridia, which are strictly anaerobic bacteria.
Further, ethanol is also produced.

• Two distinct metabolic pathways exist, one


producing butanol from starch, the other producing
butanol from sucrose. It yields 3 parts of acetone, 6
of butanol and 1 of ethanol.
Amino acid fermentation
• The growth of micro-organisms used in
the production of amino acids is done in a
well balanced environment. The conditions
required are:
• a controlled pH of the fermentation medium
(approximately neutral);
• Rich growth media;
• highly aerobic conditions;
• sterile conditions
Monosodium Glutamate
Thank You!

By: Nina Vanessa A. Sabelita

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