5/1/2/2017

Scientists have identified two bacterial strains which can use
crude glycerol as carbon as well as energy source for production of
commercially valuable compounds - 2,3- butanediol (BDO), 1,3- Propanediol (PDO)
- along with Acetoin and ethanol.
The process has been developed by a team of scientists at the
Chemical Engineering and Process Development Division jointly with the National
Collection of Industrial Microorganisms Center, National Chemical Laboratory,
Pune. Researchers used a mixed bacterial culture to ferment crude bio-glycerol
under aerobic conditions. The bacterial strains used were Enterobacter
aerogenes NCIM 2695 and Klebsialla pneumoniae NCIM 5215. These strains when
used together can lead to 100 per cent transformation of crude glycerol.
Biodiesel production is generally expensive due to the cost of
disposal of crude glycerol. Its economics can be improved by downstream
processing of glycerol, which is a highly functional molecule. Among
value-added chemicals possible from glycerol are 1,2- and 1,3 – propanediols,
ethylene glycol, which have wide industrial applications.
"The chemo-catalytic conversion of crude glycerol into
useful molecules requires use of cost intensive metal catalysts,” said Dr
Chandrashekhar Rode, who led the research team. "Apart from cost
advantage, the bio-catalytic route yields products such as 2,3-butanediol from
glycerol without the need of a separate fermentation medium," he added.
This process of biorefining of glycerol coupled with biodiesel production is a
significant example of green biotechnology.
This work has been published in the journal Bioresource Technology. The research team included Roopa Parate, Rasika Mane, Mahesh Dharne and Dr. Chandrashekhar Rode, Chemical Engineering Division, National Chemical Laboratory, Pune.
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