Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
640743 Separation and Purification Technology 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Adsorbent surface energies determined in their intact form by capillary rise method.•xDLVO theory qualitatively predicts biomass adhesion onto chromatographic supports.•pH and ionic strength affect adsorbent–biomass interaction energy.•xDLVO interaction energies correlate with experimental cell transmission indices.

We have employed extended DLVO colloid theory to understand and explain unfavorable adhesive biomass–adsorbent interactions affecting the performance expanded bed adsorption (EBA) chromatography. These involve thermodynamic as well as electrostatic surface characterizations, adapted and streamlined towards biomass and adsorbent, which significantly improves over previous methods and avoids mechano-chemical alteration of the adsorbent. For the first time, the capillary rise method was used to determine the surface energy components of the chromatographic adsorbents. Predicted biomass–adsorbent interactions between several chromatographic adsorbents (HIC, IEX, and affinity) and different cell types (Escherichiacoli and CHO) in varying solution conditions were shown to correlate well with biomass deposition experiments.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Filtration and Separation
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