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    Utilizing electrochemical bioreactors for efficient chemical and biological applications

    Author
    Morrison, Clifford Steven
    View/Open
    178178_Morrison_rpi_0185N_11093.pdf (3.863Mb)
    Other Contributors
    Koffas, Mattheos A. G.; Dordick, Jonathan; Chakrapani, Vidhya;
    Date Issued
    2017-05
    Subject
    Chemical engineering
    Degree
    MS;
    Terms of Use
    This electronic version is a licensed copy owned by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY. Copyright of original work retained by author.;
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    URI
    https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13015/1942
    Abstract
    Industrial enzymatic reactions that require 1,4-NAD(P)H₂ to perform redox transformations often require convoluted coupled enzyme regeneration systems to regenerate 1,4-NAD(P)H₂ from NAD(P) and recycle the cofactor for as many turnovers as possible. Renewed interest in recycling the cofactor via electrochemical means is motivated by the low cost of performing electrochemical reactions, easy monitoring of the reaction progress, and straightforward product recovery. However, direct electrochemical cofactor regeneration methods invariably produce adventitious reduced cofactor side products which result in unproductive loss of input NAD(P). I will explore various strategies for mitigating adventitious product formation by electrochemical cofactor regeneration systems and offer insight as to how a successful electrochemical bioreactor system could be designed to engineer efficient 1,4-NAD(P)H₂-dependent enzyme reactions of interest to the industrial biocatalysis community. Further, I will explore the utility of an electrochemical bioreactor for delivering external reducing equivalents to an engineered strain of bacteria for improving carbon efficiency and product yield compared to cells that have not been provided external reducing equivalents.;
    Description
    May 2017; School of Engineering
    Department
    Dept. of Chemical and Biological Engineering;
    Publisher
    Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY
    Relationships
    Rensselaer Theses and Dissertations Online Collection;
    Access
    Restricted to current Rensselaer faculty, staff and students. Access inquiries may be directed to the Rensselaer Libraries.;
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