Extraction and recovery of penicillin G in a hollow-fiber membrane contactor

Smith, E; Hossain, M

HERO ID

4936685

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2007

HERO ID 4936685
In Press No
Year 2007
Title Extraction and recovery of penicillin G in a hollow-fiber membrane contactor
Authors Smith, E; Hossain, M
Journal Asia-Pacific Journal of Chemical Engineering
Volume 2
Issue 5
Page Numbers 455-459
Abstract The effect of feed pH and temperature were examined for the extraction of penicillin G from aqueous solutions. Equilibrium experiments were first carried out to establish the carrier and the solvent for better extraction in the organic phase. The feed pH was varied in the range 4.5-7 to determine the extractability of the carrier-solvent system. Organic phases consisting of the carriers Aliquat 336 and Amberlite LA-2 in the solvents Shellsol TK and oleyl alcohol gave good values of the distribution coefficient at room temperature. The distribution coefficients were greater at temperatures higher than the room temperature. Re-extraction (recovery) experiments were carried out by using an aqueous solution of salts; sodium carbonate performed better than sodium chloride. These processes were scaled up using a pilot-scale hollow-fiber membrane module (HFMM). The module (6 cm x 20 cm) had a total of 10000 microporous polypropylene hollow fibers with an effective mass transfer area of 1.4 m(2). The extraction was performed by contacting a 'feed' solution containing penicillin G (flowing in the fiber side) with an 'organic phase' of Aliquat 336 in Shellsol TK or oleyl alcohol (flowing on the shell side) of the membrane contactor. An organic phase of 5% Aliquat 336 in both the solvents Shellsol TK and oleyl alcohol achieved extraction at pH 7 in the range 40-45% within 1 h at a recirculating feed flow rate of 14.4 l/h. The operating temperature affected the percentage extraction slightly and it increased with temperature before reaching a plateau at 25-30 degrees C. For recovery of penicillin G from the organic phase, experiments were carried out using aqueous solutions of sodium carbonate and sodium chloride. Sodium carbonate at pH 11.2 gave significantly better recovery (approx. 98%) compared to sodium chloride at pH 6.7 (approx. 38%) within 1.5 h. (c) 2007 Curtin University of Technology and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Doi 10.1002/apj.81
Wosid WOS:000255242000018
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Keyword extraction; recovery; penicillin G; hollow-fiber membrane contactor; distribution coefficient