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Foam fractionation of surfactant-protein mixtures

Foam fractionation is an adsorptive bubble separation technology that has shown potential as a replacement to the more costly and non-sustainable traditional downstream processing methods such as solvent extraction and chromatography for biological systems. However biological systems mostly tend to be a mixture of surface active species that complicates the foam fractionation separation. In this thesis a detailed experimental study on the application of foam fractionation to separate a well-defined surfactant-protein mixture was performed with emphasis on the competitive adsorption behaviour and transport processes of surfactant-protein mixtures in a foam fractionation process. Surface tension and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements showed that nonionic surfactant Triton X−100 maximum surface pressure, surface affinity and diffusivity were a factor of 2.05, 67.0 and 19.6 respectively greater than that of BSA. Thus Triton X−100 dominated the surface adsorption at an air-water surface by diffusing to the surface and adsorbing at the surface faster than BSA. This competitive adsorption behaviour was observed in foam fractionation experiments performed for Triton X−100/BSA mixtures for different feed concentration ratios and air flow rates. The recovery and enrichment of Triton X−100 were found to increase and decrease respectively with increasing air flow rate for all foam fractionation experiments as expected for a single component system. However the recovery and enrichment of BSA were both found to increase with increasing air flow rate for high feed concentrations of Triton X−100.Bubble size measurements of the foamate produced from foam fractionation experiments showed that at steady state conditions the bubbles rising from the liquid pool were stabilised by BSA. However at the top of the column the recovery of Triton X−100 in the foamate (75% to 100%) was always greater than the recovery of BSA (13% to 76%) for all foam fractionation experiments. In addition, for high feed concentrations of both components and at low air flow rates, the enrichment of BSA remained at almost unity for most experiments and only increased when the recovery of Triton X−100 reached 100%. Thus it was concluded that Triton X-100 displaced the adsorbed BSA from the surface. The foam drainage properties of Triton X−100/BSA mixtures were characterised using two methods; forced foam drainage and from pressure profiles of steady state foam fractionation experiments (pressure method). The drainage data from the forced foam drainage was found not to be compatible with experimental foam fractionation results, by indicating that stable foam was not produced during the foam fractionation experiments. However stable foam was repeatedly produced during foam fractionation experiments. The drainage data from the pressure method was found to be in close agreement to experimental foam fractionation experiments. The work in this thesis takes a significant step beyond the literature experimental foam fractionation studies for multicomponent systems. In addition to investigating the effect of foam fractionation process parameters on the separation of mixed systems, the results from the characterisation studies of surface adsorption and foam properties provided insight and deeper understanding of the competitive adsorption behaviour of surfactants and proteins in a foam fractionation process.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:677748
Date January 2015
CreatorsKamalanathan, Ishara Dedunu
PublisherUniversity of Manchester
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttps://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/foam-fractionation-of-surfactantprotein-mixtures(a6484b1a-d796-45ff-bc5c-420ef9130363).html

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