Fermentation Processes Leading to Glycerol

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1 Fermentation Processes Leading to Glycerol I. The Influence of Certain Variables on Glycerol Formation in the Presence of Sulfites G. G. FREEMAN AND G. M. S. DONALD Imperial Chemical Industries Limited, Nobel Division, Research Department, Stevenston, Ayrshire, Scotland Received for publication June 28, 1956 The bulk of the glycerine used in industry is obtained as a by-product of soap manufacture by hydrolysis of fats; however, the synthetic process from propylene recently developed by the Shell Chemical Corporation is now making an important contribution towards the total supply. This process has been described by Miner and Dalton (1953). Since World War II, it has been evident that glycerine demand is tending to outstrip production from saponification of fats. The main factors which have led to this situation are the increasing demand for glycerine for production of explosives, textiles, transparent paper (cellophane), paints, and so forth, and the impact of the synthetic detergent industry upon soap production. The work described in this series was part of a program which involved development to a pilot plant scale of a process for glycerol production by fermentation and isolation of the product from the fermented liquor undertaken by the Nobel Division of Imperial Chemical Industries Limited. Glycerine was first reported as a minor product of yeast fermentation of sugars in 1858 by Pasteur who observed that it was present in wines and beers to the extent of 2.5 and 3.6 per cent of the sugar fermented. Following the fundamental work of Neuberg and Reinfurth (1918, 1919) on the mechanism of alcoholic fermentation of sugars in the presence of sulfites and the independent application of the process by Connstein and Luidecke (1919) to the commercial scale production of glycerine from beet sugar in Germany during World War I (Protol process), developmental work on recovery of glycerol from fermented liquors has been carried out in Britain, in the United States and elsewhere at intervals since The use of a mixture of sulfite and bisulfite instead of sodium sulfite as the steering reagent was introduced by Cocking and Lilly (1921), and a further patent was filed in 1931 (Imperial Chemical Industries Limited and Lilly, 1931). The sparingly soluble sulfites of calcium and magnesium have been recommended as steering reagents in order to restrict the quantities of inorganic impurities in the fermented liquor (Fulmer et al., 1945; Underkofler et al., 1951a, b). The use of mixtures of ammonium sulfite and bisulfite was also suggested by Fulmer et al. (1941) as a means of simplifying the recovery process, but later work by these authors showed that the fermentation was unsatisfactory in the presence of ammonium salts (Underkofler et al., 1951a). A fermentation process for glycerol based on Neuberg's third form of ftrmentation was described by Eoff (1918) and Eoff et al. (1919). In this process yeast fermentation of sugars takes place in the presence of about 30 per cent of sodium carbonate, based on the weight of fermentable sugar. So far as is known this procedure was never developed to a commercial scale. There are numerous reviews on production of glycerine by fermentation. They include the work of Prescott and Dunn (1949), a recent review by Underkofler (1954) and a series of abstracts of articles and patents by Whalley (1942). An important new development in this field is concerned with the production of glycerol by osmophilic yeasts in the absence of steering reagents. Glucose concentrations up to 29 per cent were fermented in about 10 days with production of glycerol and D- arabitol in yields of 32 and 17 per cent respectively, in terms of glucose utilized (Spencer, 1955; Spencer and Sallans, 1956; Spencer et al., 1956). Another fermentation of glucose leading to glycerol (together with 2,3-butyleneglycol), in the absence of steering reagents, proceeds in the presence of Ford's strain of Bacillus subtilis (Neish et al., 1945). In this paper experiments on the effect of variables on the kinetics of fermentation and yields of products in the sulfite fermentation of sugars are described. These variables include sulfite dosage and sulfite concentration, initial sugar concentration, temperature, aeration, ph, and yeast strain. In later papers in this series, studies on (a) the effect of sulfite on yeast growth, yeast viability, rate of fermentation and other factors (Freeman and Donald, 1957a), and (b) the effect of yeast strain and other variables on the kinetics and yields of products of fermentation of sugars in the presence of alkalis (Freeman and Donald, 1957b) are described. EXPERIMENTAL METHODS Fermentation Vessels Fermentations were carried out in cylindrical stainless steel tanks (25 cm. id. by 40 cm high) of about 12 L 197

2 198 G. G. FREEMAN AND G. M. S. DONALD [VOL. 5 capacity. A stainless steel lid was attached by 4 screws and was fitted with a rubber gasket to ensure gas tightness. The lid was fitted with 2 glass inspection ports and carried a paddle-type stirrer. A gas inlet tube entered the vessel through the lid and was provided with a cotton wad filter and sintered glass disperser (Aeroxl). Effluent gases were allowed to escape through an outlet tube, plugged with cotton. Before sterilization by passage through the cotton filter, gas entering the vessel was passed through a Rotameter2 flow-meter, calibrated to measure flows in the range of 5 to 100 L/hr. Sulfite additions were normally made from a measuring cylinder through the effluent gas port and were accompanied by vigorous mechanical stirring of the fermenting liquor. The fermentation vessels were immersed in electrically heated, thermostatically controlled water baths with the liquid levels inside and outside the fermentors approximately equal. The preferred process, developed in the course of the work, is described below. Variations of the standard procedure are stated in the relevant experiments. Preliminary experiments showed that pure culture conditions were unnecessary after sulfite addition had begun. Preparation of Inoculum A culture medium of beer wort (sp gr 1.050; ph 6.0; 100 ml) was sterilized by autoclaving (15 lb/sq in for 20 min), cooled, inoculated from a stock culture of the desired yeast strain and incubated for 1 to 3 days at 35 C with moderate aeration with air. At the end of this period, the cell count was 100 X 106 cells per ml. The main inoculum medium (680 ml) was prepared from diluted Cuban blackstrap molasses and contained initially 5 g/100 ml of reducing sugars as invert sugar. It had the following composition: Cuban blackstrap molasses, 100 g; sodium carbonate (Na2CO3), 1 g; disodium hydrogen phosphate, 2.2 g; ammonium sulfate, 1.3 g; and water to 1000 ml; ph 6.7. The medium was sterilized by autoclaving, inoculated from the beer wort culture (20 ml to 680 ml) and incubated for 24 to 36 hr at 35 C with moderate aeration with air. At the end of this period, the culture contained approximately 200 X 106 yeast cells/ml. The preferred yeast strain, B.71 in the laboratory collection, was obtained in March, 1950, from an industrial alcohol distillery. This culture was "acclimatized" to tolerate a concentration of 6.6 g/100 ml (as Na2SO3) of sodium sulfite-bisulfite solution at ph 6.7. Preparation of Fermentation Medium The Cuban blackstrap molasses used in this work had the following composition: total copper reducing 1 Aerox Limited, Glasgow, Scotland. 2 Rotameter Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Croydon, Surrey, England. substances as invert sugar, 53.5; unfermentable copper reducing substances as invert sugar, 3.6; and organic impurities (by difference), 15.4 per cent. The fermentation medium had the following composition: Cuban blackstrap molasses, approx. 450 g; anhydrous sodium carbonate, approx. 5 g; disodium hydrogen phosphate, 2.5 g; ammonium sulfate, 1.4 g; and water to make 1000 ml; ph 6.8. The molasses was dissolved in tap water and sufficient sodium carbonate solution (16 per cent, wt/vol) added to adjust the ph to 6.8. The concentration of molasses was adjusted so that the initial reducing sugar concentration (as invert sugar) of the fermentation medium, after addition of the inoculum was 20 to 22 g/100 ml. The fermentation vessels contained 7 L of medium. Each vessel, complete with stirrer and air filter, was pasteurized by steaming at 100 C for 45 min. Fermentations were normally carried out in sets of four. Sulfite Solutions Sulfite addition to the fermentations was either in the form of sodium sulfite or a mixture of sodium sulfite and sodium bisulfite. The stock solution of the former contained 30 g/100 ml of Na2SO3 and its ph was 9.2 to 9.4. Mixed sulfite solution was prepared (a) by passage of sulfur dioxide into a hot solution of sodium carbonate (26 g/100 ml) until the ph fell to ph 6.7 or (b) by mixing the appropriate quantities of sodium sulfite and sodium bisulfite, as follows: Na2SO3, 236 g; NaHSO3, 62, g; and water to 1000 ml; ph 6.7. In some experiments other proportions of sulfite and bisulfite than the approximately 80:20 mixture as above, for example 50:50, were used. Sulfitebisulfite mixtures with a total sulfite concentration of 25.7 g/100 ml as Na2SO3 equivalent had a pk of 6.1. General Fermentation Technique Each fermentation vessel was inoculated with 700 ml of inoculum culture. After inoculation the fermentation medium was mechanically stirred and aerated with air (30 L/hr, approximately 4 vol/vol/hr) for 30 min to promote yeast growth. After a further period of 3 to 4 hr, vigorous fermentation had been established, the ph value had fallen to 6.0 and the hemocytometer cell count had risen to about 30 X 106 cells/ml. Sulfite additions were then begun in portions of approximately 1 per cent by volume of the fermenting liquor (initially 70 ml; later 100 ml) of the 30 g/100 ml solution (as Na2SO3), equivalent to approx. 0.3 g/100 ml NasSO3 equivalent in the fermentation medium. After each sulfite addition, visible fermentation was inhibited for a period and the fermentation was allowed to become vigorous again before a further addition was made. The interval between successive sulfite additions was normally 30 min to 1 hr. In order to reduce to a minimum the time of exposure of the yeast culture to sulfite-

3 1957] FERMENTATION PROCESSES LEADING TO GLYCEROL. I 199 bisulfite mixtures at low ph values (which have a markedly toxic effect) the first 4 to 6 additions were of sodium sulfite solution (ph 9.2). When the ph of the fermenting medium had been restored by this means to 6.6, subsequent additions were of sulfite-bisulfite mixture (ph 6.7). These additions were continued until the desired sulfite equivalent concentration (usually 3.0 to 3.5 g/100 ml) was reached. This level was then maintained by the periodic addition of sulfite solution, as required, until the desired total quantity (usually 40 per cent of the total fermentable sugar) had been added. During the period of sulfite addition the ph of the fermenting medium remained fairly constant within the range 6.7 to 7.0 until the sugar concentration had fallen to about 5 g/100 ml, after which there was a further rise to ph 7.1 to 7.4 during the final slow phase of fermentation. Addition of sulfite was normally complete after 27 to 33 hr from inoculation and fermentation was complete in approximately 120 hr. Determination of reducing sugar was carried out at intervals for observation of the progress of fermentation. The yields of fermentation products were calculated as a percentage of the fermentable sugar present. The latter was determined by yeast fermentation in the absence of sulfite as described by Donald et al. (1953). The fermentation temperature was 35 C. Analytical Methods ph determinations were made by the glass electrode method with a Cambridge ph meter.3 Sulfite concentrations in fermentation liquors and steering reagent solutions were determined by iodimetric titration in the presence of an excess of hydrochloric acid. Results are expressed throughout in terms of sodium sulfite equivalents. Non-sulfite, iodine reducing substances were also present in molasses fermentation liquors. A "sulfite" determination carried out on a typical fermentation liquor before inoculation gave an apparent sodium sulfite equivalent (as Na2SO3) of 0.32 g/100 ml. No correction has been made for this since it was not known how the quantities of iodine reducing substances varied during the fermentation. Reducing sugars were determined by a Fehling-Soxhlet-permanganate method. Proteins and suspended matter were removed by treatment with a slight excess of neutral lead acetate solution and the excess lead precipitated as lead oxalate. Any sucrose present in the clarified filtrate was inverted by heating with hydrochloric acid and the reducing sugars determined as invert sugar by a combination of the methods of Munson and Walker (1906) and Bertrand (1906). Cuprous oxide precipitated under the conditions specified by Munson and Walker was filtered off, washed, redissolved in ferric sulfate solution and 3Cambridge Instrument Co., Ltd., London, England. determined by titration with potassium permanganate. A small blank value on the reagents was deducted from the titers. The procedure for clarification and removal of proteins in the case of another molasses fermentation has been described in detail by Freeman and Morrison (1946). Determination of glycerol in fermented liquors is a difficult problem which has only recently been satisfactorily solved. In the analytical mnethods used by earlier workers, attempts were made to separate glycerol from organic impurities derived from molasses either (a) by solvent extraction or (b) by distillation. Solvent extraction methods such as acetone extraction followed by determination of total acetyl value tend to give high results owing to incomplete elimination of hydroxylic impurities. Methods based on separation of glycerine by distillation give low results due to its low volatility. The method used for the bulk of the present work, a kerosene distillation method, developed in 1938 by our colleagues R. A. Walmesley and R. H. Mathew and privately communicated to the authors, is based on the following three steps: (a) extraction of a weighed amount of sample, mixed with sodium sulfate, by means of hot acetone, (b) removal of acetone and separation of the glycerol by distillation in the presence of kerosene and (c) extraction of glycerol from the distillate with water, and its determination by oxidation with potassium dichromate. In order to determine the accuracy of this method when applied to fermentation liquors, a series of "synthetic" samples was prepared by addition of pure glycerol and sulfite-bisulfite liquor to molasses fermentation liquors prepared by normal alcoholic fermentations in the absence of sulfites. A small quantity of glycerol was formed in this fermentation, approx. 1.0 g/100 ml, and corrections were made for it. The "synthetic" samples were prepared as follows: Cuban blackstrap molasses was diluted with water and inoculated with yeast as described above so that the initial reducing sugar concentration after inoculation was 22 g/100 ml as invert sugar. Fermentation at 35 C took place for 5 days. The initial ph in this experiment was ph 5.0. The yeast was removed by filtration and to the fermented solution (350 ml) was added 30 per cent (wt/vol) sulfite-bisulfite solution (ph 6.7) (100 ml), and an accurately weighed quantity of pure glycerol (20 g). The mixture was diluted to 500 ml. Glycerol concentrations, calculated on this basis and found by the kerosene distillation method, in a series of "synthetic" samples, are tabulated in table 1. In calculating the concentration of glycerol present, a value for the glycerol formed in the ethanolic fermentation liquor of 0.96 g/100 ml was found by the kerosene distillation method and added to the known quantity of pure glycerol. Column 2 in the table gives the calculated glycerol values obtained in this way. The experimental value by the kerosene

4 200 G. G. FREEMAN AND G. M. S. DONALD [VOL. 5 distillation method was 7 per cent low on this basis. On the assumption, which may not be strictly true, that the error was constant irrespective of glycerol concentration or ratio of impurities to glycerol, the value of 0.96 g/100 ml was increased by 7 per cent to give 1.03 g/100 ml as the glycerol produced by fermentation and the total glycerol content of the "synthetic" samples vorrespondingly increased (column 3). On this basis, it was concluded that, on the average, the kerosene distillation method gave results on sulfite fermentation liquors which were 8.2 per cent low. Except where otherwise stated, the analytical data quoted below (obtained by the kerosene distillation method) are uncorrected. With correction by the above factor, the kerosene distillation method can be relied upon to give accurate and consistent values for glycerol content of sulfite fermentation liquors. When large numbers of analyses were necessary, however, the method proved to be laborious and time consuming and, during the course of the present investigation, work was in progress in this laboratory on alternative methods for glycerol determination in fermented liquors. This led to the development of a chromatographic-periodate method by Sporek and Williams (1954). In principle this method is similar to that of Neish (1950), in which glycerol in milligram amounts was separated from the impurities present in fermentation liquors by chromatography and determined by a colorimetric procedure. Sporek and Williams showed that the glycerol values found for a series of 9 sulfite fermentation liquors from Cuban blackstrap molasses were in good agreement with the TABLE 1. Determination of glycerol in "synthetic" fermentation liquors by the kerosene distillation method Known quantities of glycerol and sulfite-bisulfite were added to ethanolic fermentation solutions from blackstrap molasses to simulate the product of the sulfite fermentation. Calculated Glycerol Concentration Error (1) (2) Glycerol Sample Based on Based on cor- Concentra- Reference No. rected value uncorrected Foon As com- As comvalue for (X 1.07) for oun pared with pared with glycerol in glycerol in (1) (2) fermented fermented liquor liquor g/10o ml g/100 ml g/100 ml % % B12/41/ B32/14/ Mean error corresponding results by the kerosene distillation method, after the latter had been corrected by the factor Similarly, a fermentation liquor prepared from Cuban blackstrap molasses by the method of Eoff et al. (1919) gave uncorrected values for glycerol by the kerosene distillation method of 3.1, and 3.3 per cent and values of 3.4 and 3.4 per cent by the chromatographic method. The corrected value for the kerosene distillation method (3.46 per cent) is in good agreement with the chromatographic data. As a preliminary step in determination of acetaldehyde and ethanol in fermented liquors, acetaldehyde was liberated from the acetaldehyde sodium bisulfite complex by addition of the theoretical quantity of barium chloride to precipitate free sulfite, and an excess of calcium carbonate. The mixture was distilled in a current of steam and the volatile components were condensed in a long spiral tube cooled in ice. Acetaldehyde and ethanol were determined in the distillate, the former by Ripper's (1900) method and the latter by oxidation with excess potassium dichromate (Janke and Kropacsy, 1935); in the ethanol determination a correction was made for the known acetaldehyde content of the sample. Yeast cell counts were determined by the hemocytometer method. This procedure was rapid and in general satisfactory, although it was found that lengthy exposure to sulfite solutions caused clumping of the cells which made accurate counting difficult in certain cases. Effect of Variables on Kinetics of Fermentation and Yields of Products (a) Effect of sulfite dosage and concentration. A series of fermentations was carried out with sulfite dosages ranging from 5 to 50 per cent (based on fermentable sugar). A maximum free sulfite concentration of 3.0 to 3.5 g/100 ml was established in the fermenting liquor in the experiments with sulfite dosages of 25 to 50 per cent. When the dosage was less than 25 per cent correspondingly lower maxima were reached. The relationships between yields of glycerol, acetaldehyde, ethanol, and acetic acid and sulfite dosage are plotted in figure 1. This figure includes a theoretical curve for acetaldehyde yield, (glycerol yield - acetic acid yield X 184/60) 44/92, on the assumption that glycerol not formed by Neuberg's third form of fermentation is stoichiometrically related to acetaldehyde production. Glycerol determinations were by the chromatographic-periodate method. Data for glycerol and acetaldehyde yields at sulfite dosages of 75 and 150 per cent from Neuberg and Reinfurth (1918) are included in the figure. Within the 25 to 50 per cent range of sulfite dosage, fermentation time (5 days) was not significantly influenced. In a further series of fermentations, the maximum free sulfite concentration in the fermenting liquor was varied from 2.0 to 5.0 g/100 ml at a constant sulfite

5 1957] FERMENTATION PROCESSES LEADING TO GLYCEROL. I 201 dosage of 43 per cent. The lower sulfite concentrations were reached early in the fermentation but the highest concentrations were attained only for a short time near the end of the period of sulfite addition. There was an increase of glycerol yield from 22.3 to 25.6 per cent of the fermentable sugar when the maximum free sulfite concentration was increased from 2.0 to 4.0 g/100 ml. Fermentation time also increased with increase of maximum free sulfite concentration. It was concluded that the most satisfactory maximum sulfite concentration was 3.5 g/100 ml. (b) Effect of ph of sulfite solution. ph changes during fermentation. At the end of the "prefermentation" period, when addition of sulfite was begun, the ph of the fermenting liquor was about ph 6.0. As the toxic effect of sulfite-bisulfite solutions is markedly enhanced at low ph values because of the greater proportiorn of bisulfite present, it was found necessary to restore the reaction to about ph 6.7 as rapidly as possible in order to minimize toxic effects on the yeast. When the initial additions of steering reagent were in the form of sodium sulfite (ph 9.2) or sodium carbonate 30 Z5 Iii X a- Zz X L i ZIi la ki. w K> ;_ - solution (30 per cent wt/vol) instead of sulfite-bisulfite (80:20; ph 6.7) a more vigorous fermentation was obtained and the total time was reduced; the yield of products was unaffected. When sodium sulfite solution (ph 9.2) was used as steering reagent throughout the fermentation, there was no significant effect on the yields of products as compared with fermentations in which a sulfite-bisulfite mixture (ph 6.7) was used. In spite of the difference in ph values of these solutions, when equilibrium was established there was little effect on the ph of the fermenting liquor owing to the buffering effect of carbonates derived from fermentation carbon dioxide, organic impurities in the molasses and other components of the fermenting liquor. Thus the final ph of the fermented liquor was ph 7.3 wheni sodium sulfite was used as steering reagent as compared with a mean ph range of 7.1 to 7.4 in the case of a large number of mixed sulfite fermentations. Details of ph changes in the fermenting liquor under various conditions of fermentation are summarized in table 2. The effect of sulfite-bisulfite solutions of ph 6.0 SULPHITE DOSCAGE (PERPCENr 0FF' RMENTANLE SUGA.) FIG. 1. Effect of variation of sulfite equivalent dosage on yields of products in the mixed sulfite fermentation of molasses. Fermentations were carried out by the standard method.

6 202 G. G. FREEMAN AND G. M. S. DONALD [VOL. 5 (approx. composition: Na2SO3, 45 parts; NaHSO3, 55 parts) and ph 6.3 (approx. composition: Na2SO3, 64 parts; NaHSO3, 36 parts) was investigated in experiment 56 (table 3); the ph of the fermenting liquors was restored to ph 6.7 by means of sodium sulfite solution (ph 9.2). The use of these steering reagents had no appreciable effect on the yields of products in terms of sugar fermented, and the toxic effect of the higher bisulfite concentrations was shown in the lowered reducing sugar attenuations and greatly increased fermentation time. For comparative purposes, the mean values from representative mixed sulfite fermentations are also summarized in table 3. (c) Effect of mode and time of initial sulfite addition. Addition of sulfite solution was normally begun as soon as vigorous fermentation was visible. Some difficulty was experienced in determining this point precisely and, as premature addition of sulfite considerably retarded fermentation, an experiment was carried out to determine the effect of a delay of 3 hr in making the illitial Experiment No. TABLE 2. addition of sulfite. In four parallel fermentations, initial sulfite additions were made 0, 1, 2, and 3 hr after vigorous fermentation was first observed. There was no effect on the yields of products. In experiments 58/3 and 4, sulfite-bisulfite solution (ph 6.7) was added continuously instead of at approximately hourly intervals, the rate being adjusted so that addition was complete in the normal period of 30 hr from inoculation. In spite of the lower free sulfite concentrations reached (maxima 2.7 and 2.1 g/100 inl, respectively) especially in the early stages, the glycerol yields (mean 25.0 per cent) were normal. The time of fermentation was slightly reduced to 100 hr. (d) Effect of initial fermentable sugar concentration. The effect of initial fermentable sugar concentrations in the range 16 to 30 g/100 ml as invert sugar was investigated in experiments 41/1-4 and 58/1 and 2 (table 4). A sharp increase of time to completion of fermentation and of residual unfermented reducing sugar concentration occurred in fermentations with initial ph Changes during the course of fermentations in the presence of various steering reagents Experimental Conditions. Steering Reagent Used for: Initial additions to restore ph to 6.7 Remainder of additions Sulfite ph of Fermenting Liquor sg 0 hr 11M4 hr 12 hr 154 hr 15YAhr 23i hr 37 hr 58 hr Final: 130 hr 33/1 Na2SO3, ph 9.2 Na2SO3, ph o hr 10 hr 11'4 hr 15% hr 16 hr 24 hr 35 hr 42 hr Final: /1 Na2SO3, ph 9.2 Mixed sulfite, ph * /2 Na2CO3 Mixed sulfite, ph ohr 11 hr 17Y4 hr 22 hr 33 hr 34 hr 58 hr Final: /1 Mixed sulfite, ph 6.7 Mixed sulfite, ph * After this point, additions were of sulfite-bisulfite solution (ph 6.7) instead of sodium sulfite or sodium carbonate. TABLE 3. Influence of ph value of sulfite-bisulfite solution in the mixed sulfite fermentation The following steering reagents were compared (a) sodium sulfite, sodium bisulfite mixture (45/55, ph 6.0), (b) sodium sulfite, sodium bisulfite mixture (64/36, ph 6.3) and (c) sodium sulfite, sodium bisulfite mixture (80/20, ph 6.7). The ph was restored to ph 6.7 at the end of the prefermentation period by addition of sodium sulfite ph 9.2. Glycerol determinations were by the kerosene distillation method. Yields of Products, Per Cent of Fermentable Sugar Fermentable Time for Com- Experiment No. Details Sulfite Dosage _ Sugar pletion of Fer- Glycerol Glyceol Etanol Ethanol Acetalde- Attenuation mentation hyde.%...%. hr... 56/1 Sulfite-bisulfite solution (ph 6.0) as steering rea /2 gent except for initial additions /3 Sulfite-bisulfite solution (ph 6.3) as steering rea /4 gent except for initial additions Mean of large number of representative mixed sul fite fermentations, with sulfite-bisulfite solution (ph 6.7) as steering reagent except for initial additions

7 1957] FERMENTATION PROCESSES LEADING TO GLYCEROL. I 203 reducing sugar concentrations higher than 22 g/100 ml. The glycerol yield decreased slightly at this point, probably as a result of the lower sugar attenuation. The acetaldehyde yield (10 to 12 per cent) remained fairly constant throughout and the ethanol yield, although fairly constant (21 to 23 per cent) at initial sugar concentrations up to 25 g/100 ml, fell markedly to 15 per cent when the initial sugar concentration was raised to 30 g/100 ml. (e) Effect of yeast strain. Seven strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae from a variety of sources in the United Kingdom were compared in mixed sulfite fermentations with the preferred strain B.71. A marked variation was observed in the sulfite tolerance of some of the strains, which led to considerable variation in rate of fermentation and degree of reducing sugar attenuation (table 5). Two strains of Saccharomyces thermantitonum were also examined in mixed sulfite fermentations. These strains were listed in the Institute of Brewing Yeast collection, 1949 (Institute of Brewing, 1949). These four fermentations were carried out at 40 C, which has been shown to be the optimum for fermentation of S. thermantitonum in the absence of sulfite by von Euler and Laurin (1919, 1920). This species proved to be very sensitive to sulfite and fermentation was slow and incomplete even at sulfite concentrations of 0.6 g/100 ml (table 5). In experiment 51, yeast strain B.71, "acclimatized" to the presence of 6.6 g/100 ml of sulfite-bisulfite mixture at ph 6.7 and subcultured for one year in the presence of sulfite, was compared with another culture from the same source which had not previously been grown in the presence of sulfite. No significant difference was observed in the fermentations obtained with the two cultures. TABLE 4. Effect of initial reducing sugar concentration A series of diluted molasses media with initial reducing sugar concentrations in the range 16 to 30 g/100 ml, as invert sugar, were fermented under comparable conditions. The added inorganic nutrients were kept constant as described in the standard conditions. Glycerol determinations were by the kerosene distillation method. Yields of Prod- Observed Hexose Initial ucts Ceonenrto Experi- Initial Reducing Timen- Concentration met Reducing Sugar At- Fermena e No. Sugar - tenuation tation Concentration Ac- Glyc- Eth- etal- 73 hr 191 h r erol anol dehyde g/100 ml % % % % hr giloo ml 58/ / / / / / (f) Effect of temperature of fermentation. A series of fermentations was carried out at temperatures of 25, 30 and 35 C, from which it was concluded that the optimal temperature lay in the range of 30 to 35 C. (g) Effect of re-use of yeast crop. It was shown in a series of experiments that the precipitate of yeast cells which settled to the foot of the fermentation vessel could be re-used to carry out at least 3 further fermentations without special treatment to stimulate cell division. This procedure resulted in slight increases in glycerol yield and rate of fermentation. On completion of each successive fermentation in the series, the yeast crop was allowed to settle to the bottom of the vessel and the fermented liquor was decanted. Fresh medium, previously pasteurized, was then added and the yeast precipitate was dispersed in the liquid by mechanical stirring and aeration with air. Vigorous fermentation was observed after 2 to 4 hr. (h) Relationship between hexose fermented and glycerol formation during the course oj the fermentation. The introduction of a chromatographic-periodate method of glycerol determination (Sporek and Williams, 1954), in which it was possible to separate glycerol from relatively large quantities of unfermented hexose enabled the relationship between hexose fermentation and glycerol formation to be investigated throughout typical fermentations. Errors introduced by sampling during the period of sulfite addition were minimized by carrying out this work in the course of a 27,000 L pilot plant scale fermentation. Samples of the fermenting liquor were withdrawn at intervals for determination of reducing sugar, free sulfite, and glycerol concentrations (figure 2). In this figure, the glycerol yield is plotted both as the total yield to the time of sampling and also as the mean yield during the period between consecutive samplings; in each case the yields are calculated as percentages of the reducing sugar fermented in the corresponding period. The proportion of hexose converted to glycerol rose rapidly to a maximum (46 per cent) after 20 hr from inoculation and thereafter fell steadily to zero after 96 hr, although slow fermentation was still in progress at that time. The maximum conversion of hexose to glycerol coincided approximately with the mnaximum free sulfite concentration in the fermenting liquor. (i) Investigation of a continuous fermentation procedure. A series of 12 fermentations was carried out to investigate a continuous fermentation procedure in in which each fermentation, after the first in the series, was inoculated with a portion of the actively fermenting liquor from the previous fermentor. The initial fermentation (7,000 ml) was inoculated with a culture (700 ml) of "acclimatized" yeast (strain B.71). After 24 hr, addition of sulfite was almost complete. Approximately one-half (3,500 mnl) of the vigorously fermenting liquor was then transferred to a second fermentor

8 204 G. G. FREEMAN AND G. M. S. DONALD [VOL. 5 containing an equal volume of diluted molasses medium (28 g/100 ml as invert sugar) so that the reducing sugar concentration after inoculation was 20 to 22 g/100 ml. After a further 24 hr, a portion of this liquor was used to inoculate the next fermentor of the series in a similar manner. Fermentation was allowed to continue in the remainder of the liquor in the usual way. The initial free sulfite concentration in fermentations 3 to 12 was in the range 1.7 to 1.9 g/100 ml. The yeast cell population in the fermenting liquors fell from initial and final counts of 30 X 106 and 60 X 106 cells/nil, respectively, in the first fermentation to 10 X 106 and 20 X 106f cells/ml, respectively, from the third fermentation onward. The limited cell division observed in the later fermentations occurred during the first 24 hr after inoculation and thereafter little further growth occurred. The time for completion of fermentation increased rapidly from 120 hr in the first fermentation to about 288 hr in the third and subsequent fermentations. The yields of products were normal. It was clear from these experiments that owing to the slow rate of yeast cell division in the presence of sulfite, satisfactory continuous fermentation procedures were not possible. The question of yeast cell multiplication in the presence of sulfite has been investigated by Freeman and Donald (1957a). (j) Effect of nature of substrate. Blackstrap molasses as compared with glucose, sucrose, raw sugar. Experiments in which Cuban blackstrap molasses was compared with glucose, sucrose, and raw sugar as substrates in the mixed sulfite fermentation showed that the impurities present in blackstrap molasses play an important role in the fermentation. Media containing only pure sugars or raw sugar and salts fermented at markedly slower rates under comparable conditions of free sulfite concentration and sulfite dosage (table 6). Blackstrap molasses media with initial reducing sugar concentrations of about 20 g/100 ml fermented satisfactorily in the presence of maximum free sulfite concentrations of 3.5 g/100 ml whereas in media containing raw sugar or sucrose as substrates, under the same conditions, fermentation was slow and incomplete. (The raw sugar TABLE 5. Comparison of 8 strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and 2 strains of Saccharomyces thermantitonum in mixed sulfite fermentations The S. cerevisiae fermentations were carried out under normal conditions at 35 C and the S. thermantitonum fermentations at 40 C. With the exception of those used in experiments 51/1 and 81, all the cultures were "acclimatized" to the presence of sulfitebisulfite mixture (6.6 g/100 ml at ph 6.7). Glycerol determinations were by the kerosene distillation method. 'Culture No. Yields of Products Reducing Time of Experiment No. ry Collec- Details of Culture Source of Culture Sge - Attentua- Fertina tion Glycerol Ethanol Acetael io % % % % % days 54/2-3 (mean) B.63 S. cerevisiae Brewers' yeast, acquired /1 B.71 Industrial alcohol distillery /2 B.66 S. cerevisiae Bakers' yeast /3 B.67 Brewers' yeast, acquired /4 B /1 B.68 S. cerevisiae Prof. R. H. Hopkins, No. 1* /2 B.69 Prof. R. H. Hopkins, No. 2* /3 B.70 Prof. R. H. Hopkins, No. 3* /4 B /1 B.72 S. cerevisiae Brewers' yeast, acquired /2 B /2 B.71 S. cerevisiae "Acclimatized" to presence of sul fite-bisulfite, ph /1 B.71 Unacclimatized culture /1 B.76 S. thermantitonum The Institute of Brewing yeast col Lorgensen strain lection No /3 B.76 The Institute of Brewing yeast col Nil lection No /2 B.77 S. thermantitonum The Institute of Brewing yeast col Chapman strain lection 81/4 B.77 The Institute of Brewing yeast col lection * Acquired March 1950.

9 FERMEENTATION PROCESSES LEADING TO GLYCEROL. I 205 used in this work is the startiing material for refining cane sugar in the Uniited Kingdom; average specimens contained approx 97 per cent of sucrose, and 1.6 per cent of invert sugar). In experiments 84/1 and 86/1, with raw sugar as the substrate, the prefermentation period was prolonged to 512 to 612 hr. At this stage cell populations were 51 X 106 and 36 X 106 cells/ml, respectively, and the reaction of the medium had fallen to ph 5.6 in both cases. When the maximum free sulfite concentration was restricted to 1.6 to 1.7 g/100 ml as in experiments 103/1-4 with glucose and sucrose as substrates, the fermentation proceeded at a rate approximately comparable to that obtained with molasses media, and it is clear that sulfite concentration is a critical factor in unaerated fermentations of glucose and sucrose. The effect of aeration with air at 4 vol/vol/hr was investigated in a series of fermentations of raw sugar in which maximum free sulfite concentrations of 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, and 3.0 g/100 ml were reached. Under these A-0~~~~~ /4.0 Li kii IL 50 (Q hlao Ii 4ZN ~?_0 ~ ~ conditions, high free sulfite concentrations were tolerated and the fermentations proceeded to completion in periods as short as 192 hr and resulted in yields of pr oducts comparable to those obtained with blackstrap molasses as substrate under aerated or unaerated conditions. Comparison of the effects of aeration with air, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide showed that the stimulative effect of aeration with air in raw sugar fermentations depended both upon the presence of an excess of oxygen in the fermenting medium and upon removal of toxic volatile fermentation products by the gas stream. Thus the rate of fermentation during aeration with nitrogen was considerably lower than during aeration with air but significantly higher than in the absence of aeration. When carbon dioxide was passed through the fermenting medium, fermentation proceeded at a diminishing rate during the initial 24 hr and ceased after 48 hr owing to the death of the yeast cells. (k) Oxidation-reduction potentials offermenting liquors. The importance of aeration with air in influencing the Is c C)0 10~'-4 - P.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~P TIMvE (HOUp') FIG. 2. Relationship between hexose fermented, glycerol formation, and free sulfite concentration during the course of the fermentation. A, Glycerol yield: mean between consecutive samplings; B, Glycerol yield: total to time of sampling; C, Glycerol concentration corrected to final volume; D, Observed free sulfite concentration (as Na2SO3); E, Reducing sugar concentration corrected to final volume.

10 206 G. G. FREEMAN AND G. M. S. DONALD [VOL. 5 rate of fermentation of raw sugar, glucose, and sucrose in the presence of sulfites led to a study of the oxidation-reduction potentials of raw sugar and molasses liquors during the fermentation. Reproducible results were obtained by means of colorimetric determination with B. D. H. "Redox indicators4." They showed that the presence of sulfite is the major factor in determining the oxidation-reduction potential of the fermenting liquors. The potential fell from above (the limit of the available range of indicators) to between and v immediately after the initial addition of sulfite and remained within this range until fermentation was complete. No significant effect on the potential by aeration with air was detectable by the methods employed. (1) Minor fermentation products and components of the fermented liquor. (1) Acetic acid: Volatile acids were determined in the fermented liquors by a modification of the method of Pregl (1945), consisting essentially of acidification of the fermented liquor (10 ml) with 25 per cent p-toluenesulfonic acid (4 ml) and distillation in vacuo into an excess of sodium hydroxide. The distillate contained sulfur dioxide as well as volatile organic acids; the former was determined iodimetrically and a correction applied to the gross titer. Nelson (1929) stated that a sample of Puerto Rican molasses contained formic acid (0.1 per cent) and acetic acid (0.2 per cent). The specimen of Cuban blackstrap molasses used in our work contained volatile acids, 4The British Drug Houses Ltd., Poole, Dorset, England. calculated as acetic acid (0.38 per cent). It was concluded that the bulk of the volatile acids found in the mixed sulfite fermentation liquors were formed in the fermentations since only 0.2 g/100 ml as acetic acid is accounted for by the volatile acids present in the molasses whereas, for example, the concentration in the fermented liquor in experiment 126/1 was 0.6 g/100 ml. The influence of sulfite dosage on acetic acid production in the fermentation is shown in figure 1. The bulk of the volatile acids present in a typical fermentation liquor was identified as acetic acid by isolation of the p-phenylphenacyl ester, mp and mixed mp 108 to 110 C. (2) Lactic acid: The lactic acid content of sulfite fermentation liquors was determined semiquantitatively by a modification of the method of Boyland (1928) and it was concluded that a small amount of lactic acid equivalent to approx 1.8 per cent of the hexose fermented was formed during typical fermentations of molasses in the presence of sulfites. (3) Aconitic acid: Aconitic acid was determined by the decarboxylation method of Roberts and Ambler (1947), and a correction was made for the carbonate content of the fermented liquors. A representative fermentation liquor from Cuban blackstrap molasses (experiment 64/3) contained 0.82 g/100 ml of aconitic acid, and an unfermented molasses solution, correspondingly diluted, contained 0.7 g/100 ml of the acid. It was concluded that aconitic acid was not a product of the sulfite fermentation. TABLE 6. Anaerobic, mixed sulfite fermentations of glucose, sucrose, and raw sugar Anaerobic fermentations of glucose, sucrose, and raw sugar were carried out under the normal conditions. The fermentation media contained ammonium sulfate (1.4 g/l) and disodium hydrogen phosphate (2.5 g/l) at ph 6.8. Glycerol determinations were by the kerosene distillation method. Sugar Concentration Sulfite as Na2SO3 Times torodct as Invert Sugar Te to Yields of Poducts Rate of Experiment No. Substrate Completion Fermentation Maximum of During Initial Initial Final concen- Dosage Fermentation Glycerol Ethanol Acet- 24 hr tration alehyde g/100 ml g/100 ml % days % % % g hexose/l/hr 84/1 Raw sugar / /1 and 2 (mean) Sucrose /3 and 4 (mean) / / /3 Glucose 19.6* 0.2* /4 10.2* * As glucose. Mean of representative Cuban blackstrap molasses fermentations

11 1957] FERMENTATION PROCESSES LEADING TO GLYCEROL. I 207 (m) Effect of scale of fermentation. Comparison of the kinetics and yields of products in fermentations carried out (a) in the laboratory with an initial volume of 7 L, (b) on a semitechnical scale with an initial volume of 2,700 L and (c) on a pilot plant scale with initial volumes of 27,000 L showed that within these limits the scale of fermentation had no detectable effect. Fermentations with Washed Yeast Suspensions The experiments described above were carried out under laboratory conditions approximating as closely as possible those which could be used in industrial scale fermentations. Blackstrap molasses, a complex mixture of fermentable sugars containing numerous organic and inorganic impurities, was used as starting material in the bulk of the work, and under the experimental conditions yeast growth, as well as fermentation, took place. In the following experiments, to determine the influence of ph and free sulfite concentration on the sulfite fermentation, the experimental conditions were simplified by use of glucose (initially 9 to 10 g/100 ml) as substrate in the presence of sodium phosphate and ammonium sulfate. The fermentations were inoculated with sufficient quantities, corresponding to about 80 X 106 cells per ml, of a washed suspension of yeast (strain B.71, previously "acclimatized" to 6.6 per cent free sulfite equivalent concentration) to promote rapid fermentation without significant increase of cell population. (a) Effect of free sulfite concentration. At the time of inoculation, a sufficient solution of sodium sulfite and bisulfite (ph 6.7) was added to the fermentation vessels to give free sulfite equivalent concentrations of 0, 1, 2 and 3 g/100 ml, respectively, and further additions were made at intervals to maintain these concentrations. The change in concentration of glucose due to these latter sulfite additions was small and the results have not been corrected for this factor. The ph value was initially 6.7; in the sulfite containing liquors the ph remained in the range 6.7 to 8.3 during the fermentation. In the absence of sulfite the ph rapidly fell to 2.5 to 3.0. The glucose concentrations of the fermenting liquors were determined at intervals and are reproduced in table 7. There was no initial lag in onset of fermentation. The initial approximately linear rates of fermentation were 0.57, 0.33, 0.27, and 0.15 g glucose/100 ml/hr in the presence of respective free sulfite concentrations of 0, 1, 2, and 3 g/100 ml, that is, in the ratios 100:59:47:27. After 35 to 60 hr of fermentatioin, dependent upon the free sulfite concentration, a final slow phase of fermentation set in, during which only 5 per cent or less of the original glucose was fermented. After 118 hr of fermentation, 1.9, 2.3, 4.5, and 13.8 per cent of the original glucose, respectively, remained unfermented. Glycerol yields by the kerosene distillation method in terms of total glucose were 26.5, 28.7, and 26.0 per cent in the presence of respective free sulfite concentrations of 1, 2, and 3 g/100 ml, that is, glycerol yield was practically independent of free sulfite concentration under these conditions. In terms of hexose fermented, however, the glycerol yields were 27.2, 30.2, and 30.5 per cent. It was concluded that under these conditions a free sulfite concentration of 2 to 3 g/100 ml was optimal for the major period of the fermentation but that the free sulfite concentration should be allowed to fall to less than 1 per cent at the completion of fermentation TABLE 7. Relationship between glucose concentration and time, in fermentations containing 0 to S g/100 ml of free sulfite equivalent To a solution (625 ml) containing glucose, 119 g/l; Na2HPO4, 2.0 g/l; (NH4)2SO4, 1.2 g/l; MgSO4-7H20, 0.5 g/l and KCI, 5.0 g/l at ph 6.7, the following additions were made: Experiment No. Sodium Sulfite-Bisulfite Solution, ph 6.7 Inoculum Containing 3 X 109 Cells/ml Water ml ml ml WS3/ Temperature 35 C, ph 6.7 to 8.3, except in experiment WS3/1, where the ph value rapidly fell to ph 2.5 to 3.0. The free sulfite concentrations in expts. WS3/2, 3, and 4 were maintained at 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0 g/100 ml respectively by periodic addition of sulfitebisulfite solution, pei 6.7. Glucose Concentration ph Values Experiment No. Concentration hr 4 hr 7,4 hr j 10%4 hr 22 hr 30 hr 46 hr 54 hr 70 hr 118 hr 0.5 hr 22 hr 46¼ hr 118 hr g/j00 ml gi/o1 ml WS3/

12 208 G. G. FREEMAN AND G. M. S. DONALD [VOL. 5 in order to obtain maximum utilization of fermentable sugar. (b) Effect of ph. A series of fermentations was carried out in which the ph values were maintained at ph 6.2, 6.5, 6.7, and 7.0. The free sulfite equivalent concentration was kept constant at 2.5 g/100 ml by intermittent addition of sulfite-bisulfite solution of the appropriate ph value. The results are summarized in table 8; they show that glucose attenuation and rate of fermentation fell off rapidly at and below ph 6.5. It was concluded that the optimal ph for the sulfite fermentation under these conditions was in the range of 6.7 to 7.0. DISCUSSION Under the standard conditions of fermentation, which have been described, sulfite dosage was probably the most important factor in determining yields of products and kinetics of fermentation. The dependence of the yields of glycerol, ethanol, acetaldehyde, and acetic acid on sulfite dosage is shown in figure 1. The graph shows that at 50 per cent sulfite dosage, acetaldehyde found and "theoretical acetaldehyde" approach equality, and acetic acid production is practically zero. These facts are consistent with the conclusion that, at sulfite dosages in excess of 50 per cent, glycerol production is as predicted by Neuberg's second equation (1), whereas at lower sulfite dosages a proportion of the glycerol is formed by another route as predicted by equation (2). The sulfite dosages which are necessary for high glycerol TABLE 8. Influence of ph on rate and completeness of fermentation of glucose and glycerol yields in the presence of 2.5 g/100 ml of free sulfite equivalent To the glucose medium described in table 7 (625 ml), the following additions were made: Experiment Sodium Sulfite-Bisulfite Solution Inoculum No. Containing Water ph Concentration Volume 6 x lo Cells/ml g/100 ml ml ml ml WS5/ Temperature 35 C. Free sulfite concentration, 2.5 g/100 ml. The fermented liquors were harvested after 144 hr. Glycerol determinations were by the kerosene distillation method. EMperiment nm H Intia rat of Glucose Glycerol Yield Experient ean Initial rate of Attenuation No. Value Fermentation after 144 Hr of Of total Of glucose Fermentation Ofglucosefeend g glucosel % % % 100 ml/hr WS5/ yields have important effects on rate of fermentation, time to completion of fermentation and sugar attenuation in the later stages of the process. This is clearly shown by comparison of the initial rates of fermentation and the residual glucose concentrations (after 118 hr fermentation) in experiments WS3/1-4 (table 7) in the presence of free sulfite concentrations of 0, 1, 2, and 3 g/100 ml. Comparison of the kinetics of fermentation, yields of products and ph changes during fermentations in the presence of (a) sodium sulfite and (b) various mixtures of sodium sulfite and sodium bisulfite showed that the nature of the sulfite steering reagent was unimportant until the proportion of bisulfite to sulfite exceeded 0.25:1; addition of mixtures containing higher proportions of bisulfite caused partial inhibition of the fermentation owing to the toxicity of this component. The results of the present work and that of earlier workers (Neuberg and Reinfurth, 1918, 1919) support the view that the sulfite fermentation may be regarded as a yeast fermentation in which the products are dominated by the sulfite steering reagent in a manner which may be predicted from the laws of mass action. Maximum yields of glycerol and acetaldehyde resulted from a high concentration of free sulfite in the fermenting liquor, which favored the formation of the acetaldehyde-bisulfite complex and suppressed its subsequent dissociation. The concentration of sulfite which may be employed under practical conditions is, however, limited by the tolerance of the yeast and normally a little less than half of the acetaldehyde formed as an intermediate is reduced to ethanol as in the case of ethanolic fermentation of hexose. Production of glycerol in the sulfite fermentation may be expressed by equation (1), from which it follows that theoretically glycerol production is stoichiometrically equivalent to bisulfite fixation as acetaldehyde-bisulfite compound. C6H NaHSO3 = CH,3CHO-NaHSO3 + C3H803 + CO2 This relationship has been used by some workers, for example, Underkofler et al. (1951a), as a means of ascertaining the glycerol content of fermented liquors by means of determination of sulfite fixation. In our experience, this proved to be a fairly satisfactory procedure but should be used with caution since (a) glycerol equivalent to 2.5 to 3.6 per cent of the fermentable sugar is formed in normal ethanolic fermentations in the absence of sulfite and under these conditions glycerol formation is greatly influenced by the ph of the medium and (b) a portion of the added free sulfite is lost from the system by separation as insoluble calcium sulfite by reaction with calcium salts in the molasses. It follows, from the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas scheme

13 1957] FERMENTATION PROCESSES LEADING TO GLYCEROL. I 209 for the dissimilation of glucose, that glycerol and acetaldehyde are formed in equimolecular proportions when the hexose is fermented by yeast in the presence of an acetaldehyde fixing reagent such as sulfite. It has been shown (figure 1) that when the quantity of sulfite added, as Na2SO3, was equivalent to 50 per cent or more of the fermentable hexose, the yield of acetaldehyde agreed closely with the theoretical but at lower sulfite dosages the yield of acetaldehyde was less than predicted by the theory and the discrepancy increased progressively as the sulfite dosage was diminished. It is suggested that when the quantity of added sulfite is less than half that of the fermentable hexose a proportion of the latter is fermented, with the production of glycerol, ethanol, acetic acid, and carbon dioxide, in accordance with equation (2), in addition to that which undergoes normal ethanolic fermentation in accordance with equation (3): 2C6H H20 = 2C3H803 + CH3COOH + C2H50H + 2CO2 (2) C6H1206 = 2C2H50H + 2CO2 (3) This view is supported by the presence of acetic acid as a minor product of the fermentation under these conditions. (Production of glycerol and acetic acid by yeast fermentation of hexose can also be expressed as: 3C6H H20 = 4C3H CH3COOH + 2CO2 (4) When acetaldehyde is dissimilated in presence of yeast equimolar quantities of ethanol and acetic acid are formed (Freeman and Donald, 1957b) and for this reason equation (2) is preferred.) The theoretical yield of 51 per cent of glycerol, in the sulfite fermentation, as required by equation (1) has never been realized. The major products of the fermentation are glycerol, acetaldehyde, ethanol, and carbon dioxide. In addition it has been shown that acetic acid and lactic acid are found as minor products and it is known that a small proportion of the hexose is consumed in building up yeast cell tissue. If these minor losses of hexose be neglected it is reasonable to assume that hexose molecules not fermented according to equation (1) will undergo normal ethanolic fermentation (Neuberg's first form of yeast fermentation) as required by equation (3). The yields of the major fermentation products will then be represented by the sum of equations (1) and (3), according to the relative numbers of hexose molecules which are fermented by the two routes. If, for example, equal numbers of hexose molecules were fermented in each of the two ways the over-all yields of products would be represented by equation (5) as follows: from C6H1206 = C3H803 + CH3CHO + C02 (1) C6HI206 = 2C2H50H + 2C02 (3) 2C6H1206 = C3H803 + CH3CHO+ 2C2H50H + 3C02 (5) Parts by weight: Parts by weight: The yields found by experiment, with a sulfite dosage of 40 per cent, are of approximately the same order, namely, glycerol, 27.2; ethanol, 21; and acetaldehyde 10 per cent (table 6; the glycerol value is based on the kerosene distillation method and corrected by the factor 1.09). By means of a triangular diagram (prepared by our colleagues Dr. K. Luckhurst and J. V. Gregg) relating the principal products of hexose fermented by the routes of Neuberg's three forms of fermentation, the relative proportions of hexose molecules fermented by the three routes in the presence of sulfite equivalent dosages of 5, 25, and 50 per cent have been determined. At these sulfite dosages, the percentages of hexose molecules were as follows: Sulfite Dosage Hexose Molecules Fermented by Neuberg's Forms of Fermentation First Second Third SUMMARY The following factors, which influence the kinetics of fermentation of hexoses in the presence of sulfites, have been investigated: ph, sulfite dosage and free sulfite concentration, initial substrate concentration, temperature, nature of yeast strain, and aeration. The ph optimum was 6.7 to 7.0 and the optimal temperature 30 to 35 C. The quantity of added sulfite in terms of total fermentable hexose has been shown to be an important factor in determining the relative yields of glycerol, acetaldehyde, ethanol, and acetic acid. The optimal conditions for Cuban blackstrap molasses fermentations were: initial reducing sugar concentration, 20 to 22 g/100 ml; maximum free sulfite concentration, 3 to 3.5 g/100 ml as Na2SO3 equivalent; and aeration with air restricted to 30 min during the "prefermentation" period. Under these conditions and with a sulfite dosage of 40 per cent, the fermentation was complete in 5 days with a fermentable hexose attenuation of about 93 per cent. The fermented liquor contained glycerol, 4.5 (corrected value determined by kerosene distillation method); acetaldehyde, 1.7; ethanol, 3.5; and acetic acid, 0.3 g/100 ml; equivalent to yields of 27.2, 10, 21, and 1.1 per cent respectively

14 210 G. G. FREEMAN AND G. M. S. DONALD [VOL. 5 in terms of total fermentable hexose. Acetic acid and lactic acid (about 1.8 per cent of hexose fermented) are minor products of the sulfite fermentation. REFERENCES BERTRAND, G Les dosage des sucres r6ducteurs. Bull. Soc. Chim. Paris, 35, BOYLAND, E Chemical changes in muscle. I. Methods of analysis. Biochem. J., 22, COCKING, A. T. AND LILLY, C. H Improvements in the production of glycerine by fermentation. British Patent 164,034. CONNSTEIN, W. AND LUDECKE, K tuber Glycerin- Gewinnung durch Garung. Ber. deut. chem. Ges., 52, DONALD, G. M. S., FREEMAN, G. G., AND CUNNINGHAM, M. N The determination of unfermentable reducing substances in molasses. Analyst, 78, EOFF, J. R Process of manufacturing glycerol. U. S. Patent 1,288,398. EOFF, J. R., LINDER, W. V., AND BEYER, G. F Production of glycerine from sugar by fermentation. Ind. Eng. Chem. (Ind.), 11, FREEMAN, G. G. AND MORRISON, R The determination of some products of sugar and molasses fermentations. Analyst, 71, FREEMAN, G. G. AND DONALD, G. M. S. 1957a Fermentation processes leading to glycerol. II. Studies on the effect of sulfites on viability, growth, and fermentation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. AppI. Microbiol., 5, FREEMAN, G. G. AND DONALD, G. M. S. 1957a Fermentation processes leading to glycerol. III. Studies on glycerol formation in the presence of alkalis. Appl. Microbiol., 5, FULMER, E. I., UNDERKOFLER, L. A., AND HICKEY, R. J Fermentative glycerol production. U. S. Patent 2,416,745. FULMER, E. I., HICKEY, R. J. AND UNDERKOFLER, L. A Glycerol production. U. S. Patent 2,388,840. Imperial Chemical Industries Limited, and Lilly, C. H Improvements in processes for the manufacture of glycerine by fermentation. British Patent 349,192. Institute of Brewing Yeast Collection 1949 J. Inst. Brewing, 55, 1-6. JANKE, A. AND KROPACSY, S tyber die Bestimmung des Athylalkohols und seiner Oxydationsprodukte in biologischen Substraten. Biochem. Z., 278, MINER, C. S. AND DALTON, N. N Glycerol. Reinhold Publishing Corporation, New York City, New York. MUNSON, L. S. AND WALKER, P. H Table reproduced in Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, , 37th edition, Chemical Rubber Publishing Co., Cleveland, Ohio. p NEISH, A. C Determination of glycerol and related compounds in fermentation solutions by partition chromatography. Can. J. Research, B28, NEISH, A. C., BLACKWOOD, A. C., AND LEDINGHAM, G. A Dissimilation of glucose by Bacillus subtilis (Ford's strain). Can. J. Research, B23, NELSON, E. K Some organic acids of sugar cane molasses. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 51, NEUBERG, C. AND REINFURTH, E Natuirliche und erzwungene Glycerin-bildung bei der alkoholischen Garung. Biochem. Z., 92, NEUBERG, C. AND REINFURTH, E Weitere Untersuchungen uber die korrelative Bildung von Acetaldehyd und Glycerin bei der Zuckerspaltung und neue Beitrage zur theorie der alkoholischen Garung. Ber. deut. chem. Ges., 52, PREGL, F Quantitative Organic Microanalysis, 4th ed. J. & A. Churchill Ltd., London, England. PRESCOTT, S. C. AND DUNN, C. G Industrial Micr-obiology, 2nd ed. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., London, England. RIPPER, M Eine allgemeine anwendbare massanalytische Bestimmung der Aldehyde. Monatsh. Chem., 21, ROBERTS, E. J. AND AMBLER, J. A Quantitative method for aconitic acid and aconitates. Ind. Eng. Chem. (Anal. Ed.), 19, SPENCER, J. F. T Glycerol production by osmophilic yeasts. Thesis submitted to University of Saskatchewan in May, SPENCER, J. F. T. AND SALLANS, H. R Production of polyhydric alcohols by osmophilic yeasts. Can. J. Microbiol., 2, SPENCER, J. F. T., NEISH, A. C., BLACKWOOD, A. C., AND SALLANS, H. R Polyhydric alcohol production by osmophilic yeasts: Studies with C14-labelled glucose. Can. J. Biochem. Physiol., 34, SPOREK, K. AND WILLIAMS, A. F Chromatographic determination of glycerol in fermentation solutions. Analyst, 79, UNDERKOFLER, L. A., FULMER, E. I., HICKEY, R. J., AND LEES, T. M. 1951a Production of glycerol by fermentation. I. Fermentation of dextrose. Iowa State Coll. J. Sci., 26, UNDERKOFLER, L. A., FULMER, E. I., LEES, T. M., AND Fi- GARD, P. H. 1951b Production of glycerol by fermentation. II. Fermentation of disaccharides and starch. Iowa State Coll. J. Sci., 26, UNDERKOFLER, L. A Chapter 8 of Industrial Fermentations. Edited by Underkofler, L. A. and Hickey, R. J. 1, Chemical Publishing Co., Inc., New York City, New York. VON EULER, H. AND LAURIN, I Zur Kenntnis der Hefe Saccharomyces thermantitonum. Biochem. Z., 97, VON EULER, H. AND LAURIN, I Zur Kenntnis der Hefe Saccharomyces thermantitonum. II. Mitteilung. Biochem. Z., 102, WHALLEY, M. E Abstracts of Articles and Patents on the Production of Glycerol by Fermentation. National Research Council Report No. 1070, Ottawa, Canada.

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