Economic Process Evaluation and Environmental Life-Cycle Assessment of Bio-Aromatics Production

The bio-based production of aromatics is experiencing a renaissance with systems and synthetic biology approaches promising to deliver bio-catalysts that will reach yields, rates, and titers comparable to already existing bulk bio-processes for the production of amino acids for instance. However, ar...

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Published inFrontiers in bioengineering and biotechnology Vol. 8; p. 403
Main Authors Krömer, Jens O., Ferreira, Rafael G., Petrides, Demetri, Kohlheb, Norbert
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Frontiers Media S.A 13.05.2020
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Summary:The bio-based production of aromatics is experiencing a renaissance with systems and synthetic biology approaches promising to deliver bio-catalysts that will reach yields, rates, and titers comparable to already existing bulk bio-processes for the production of amino acids for instance. However, aromatic building blocks derived from petrochemical routes have a huge economic advantage, they are cheap, and very cheap in fact. In this article, we are trying to shed light on an important aspect of biocatalyst development that is frequently overlooked when working on strain development: economic and environmental impact of the production process. We estimate the production cost and environmental impact of a microbial fermentation process depending on culture pH, carbon source and process scale. As a model molecule we use para -hydroxybenzoic acid (pHBA), but the results are readily transferrable to other shikimate derived aromatics with similar carbon yields and production rates.
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Edited by: Nils Jonathan Helmuth Averesch, Stanford University, United States
This article was submitted to Bioprocess Engineering, a section of the journal Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology
Reviewed by: Till Tiso, RWTH Aachen University, Germany; Massimo Merighi, Ginkgo BioWorks, United States
ISSN:2296-4185
2296-4185
DOI:10.3389/fbioe.2020.00403