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Sophorolipids Production from Oil Cake by Solid-State Fermentation. Inventory for Economic and Environmental Assessment

Alejandra Rodríguez, Teresa Gea, Xavier Font

2021Frontiers in Chemical Engineering34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Biosurfactants are being proposed as a substitute for surfactants in the framework of a circular economy strategy. Sophorolipids (SL) are a type of biosurfactant produced by yeast that can be produced through submerged or solid-state fermentation (SSF) processes . Even though sophorolipids are being produced at full scale, through submerged fermentations, environmental and technoeconomic information regarding its production through SSF is unavailable. An inventory of data necessary to perform preliminary economic and environmental assessments is presented in this study. Data was obtained from three SSF processes at 22-L reactor volume and from two SSF processes at 100-L reactor volume, using winterization oil cake and molasses as substrates, wheat straw as support material, and Starmerella bombicola as SL producing yeast. The effect of increasing the operation scale was assessed. Besides presenting parameters such as inoculum production, initial mass of substrates, and airflow requirements; process emissions (NH 3 , Volatile Organic Compounds, N 2 O, SH 2 and CH 4 ) and the biogas potential of the spent fermentation solids were also presented.

Topics & Concepts

FermentationPulp and paper industryBiogasVolume (thermodynamics)Solid-state fermentationEnvironmental scienceWaste managementBiogas productionStrawProduction (economics)SCALE-UPChemistryFood scienceAnaerobic digestionEngineeringMacroeconomicsClassical mechanicsEconomicsQuantum mechanicsInorganic chemistryMethaneOrganic chemistryPhysicsMicrobial bioremediation and biosurfactantsAnaerobic Digestion and Biogas ProductionBiofuel production and bioconversion