Modelling and numerical simulation of liquid–solid circulating fluidized bed system for protein purification

•The dynamic behaviour of a LSCFB system was modelled using a model based on tanks-in-series framework.•The model is capable of controlling degree of backmixing in each phase to account for various flow regimes.•The model was validated using experimental data on the extraction of bovine serum albumi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical engineering research & design 2013-09, Vol.91 (9), p.1660-1673
Hauptverfasser: Lau, Pei Wen, Utikar, Ranjeet, Pareek, Vishnu, Johnson, Stuart, Kale, Sandeep, Lali, Arvind
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The dynamic behaviour of a LSCFB system was modelled using a model based on tanks-in-series framework.•The model is capable of controlling degree of backmixing in each phase to account for various flow regimes.•The model was validated using experimental data on the extraction of bovine serum albumin as model protein.•Parametric study of critical operating parameters on performance of LSCFB was performed.•The computational model is flexible and can be extended to other protein recovery systems. A novel liquid–solid circulating fluidized bed (LSCFB) was modelled for protein recovery from the feed broth. A typical LSCFB system consists of downer and riser, integrating two different operations simultaneously. A general purpose, extensible, and dynamic model was written based on the tanks-in-series framework. The model allowed adjusting the degree of backmixing in each phase for both columns. The model was validated with previously published data on extraction of bovine serum albumin (BSA) as model protein. Detailed dynamic analysis was performed on the protein recovery operation. The interaction between the riser and downer were captured. Parametric studies on protein recovery in LSCFB system were carried out using the validated model to better understand the system behaviour. Simulation results have shown that both production rate and overall recovery increased with solids circulation rate, superficial liquid velocity in the downer and riser, and feed solution concentration. The model was flexible and could use various forms of ion exchange kinetics and could simulate different hydrodynamic behaviours. It was useful to gain insight into protein recovery processes. The general nature of the model made it useful to study other protein recovery operations for plant and animal proteins. It could also be useful for further multi-objective optimization studies to optimize the LSCFB system.
ISSN:0263-8762
DOI:10.1016/j.cherd.2013.04.004