Abstract The ferrous iron oxidation kinetics of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans in batch cultures was examined, using on-line off-gas analyses to measure the oxygen and carbon dioxide consumption rates continuously. A cell suspension from continuous cultures at steady state was used as the inoculum. It was observed that a dynamic phase occurred in the initial phase of the experiment. In this phase the bacterial ferrous iron oxidation and growth were uncoupled. After about 16 h the bacteria were adapted and achieved a pseudo-steady state, in which the specific growth rate and oxygen consumption rate were coupled and their relationship was described by the Pirt equation. In pseudo-steady state, the growth and oxidation kinetics were accurately described by the rate equation for competitive product inhibition. Bacterial substrate consumption is regarded as the primary process, which is described by the equation for competitive product inhibition. Subsequently the kinetic equation for the specific growth rate, μ, is derived by applying the Pirt equation for bacterial substrate consumption and growth. The maximum specific growth rate, μmax, measured in the batch culture agrees with the dilution rate at which washout occurs in continuous cultures. The maximum oxygen consumption rate, qO2,max, of the cell suspension in the batch culture was determined by respiration measurements in a biological oxygen monitor at excess ferrous iron, and showed changes of up to 20% during the course of the experiment. The kinetic constants determined in the batch culture slightly differ from those in continuous cultures, such that, at equal ferric to ferrous iron concentration ratios, biomass-specific rates are up to 1.3 times higher in continuous cultures.
[1]
M. Boon,et al.
The oxidation kinetics of zinc sulphide with Thiobacillus ferrooxidans
,
1998
.
[2]
J. A. Roels,et al.
Energetics and Kinetics in Biotechnology
,
1983
.
[3]
M. Boon,et al.
The use of on-line off-gas analyses and stoichiometry in the bio-oxidation kinetics of sulphide minerals
,
1998
.
[4]
D. W. Duncan,et al.
The effects of ferrous iron, dissolved oxygen, and inert solids concentrations on the growth of thiobacillus ferrooxidans
,
1988
.
[5]
F. Lawson,et al.
Kinetics of the liquid‐phase oxidation of acid ferrous sulfate by the bacterium Thiobacillus ferrooxidens
,
1970
.
[6]
J. Braddock,et al.
Growth Kinetics of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans Isolated from Arsenic Mine Drainage
,
1984,
Applied and environmental microbiology.
[7]
C. Jones,et al.
FACTORS AFFECTING METABOLISM AND FERROUS IRON OXIDATION IN SUSPENSIONS AND BATCH CULTURES OF THIOBACILLUS FERROOXIDANS: RELEVANCE TO FERRIC IRON LEACH SOLUTION REGENERATION
,
1978
.
[8]
The ferrous iron oxidation kinetics of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans in continuous cultures
,
1999,
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology.
[9]
M. Boon.
Theoretical and experimental methods in the modelling of bio-oxidation kinetics of sulphide minerals
,
1996
.