Biodiesel’s trash is a biorefineries’ treasure: the use of “dirty” glycerol as an industrial fermentation substrate

Amanda Jane Crosse1, Dean Brady2, Nerve Zhou3, Karl Rumbold1
1Industrial Microbiology and Biotechnology Laboratory, School of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
2Molecular Science Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
3Department of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology, Botswana International University of Science and Technology, Palapye, Botswana

Tóm tắt

“Dirty” glycerol from biodiesel production is having a considerable environmental impact since its disposal is expensive and difficult. The increased biodiesel production in the last two decades has forced glycerol prices down, thereby making it now unprofitable for chemical companies to produce. The problem lies with the impurities of the biodiesel conversion process usually ending up within the crude glycerol fraction. These impurities are often too costly to purify with current processes, particularly for small scale producers. A wide variety of industries, including the paint, tobacco, food and pharmaceutical industries, utilize glycerol as part of their technology or products. However, the crude glycerol from biodiesel production is not of a high enough grade to be used in these industries. Biodiesel-produced crude glycerol is therefore cheap, readily available and presents itself as an attractive carbon source for industrial microbial production systems synthesizing value-added products. This mini-review will look at (a) microbial production processes which use crude glycerol to produce high-value products (product-driven research) and (b) genetic engineering of microbes which is aimed at improving microbial “dirty” glycerol utilization (substrate driven research).

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