bio-chemical engineering. what is chemical engineering ?

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BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING

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Page 1: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING

Page 2: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

What is Chemical Engineering

?

Page 3: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

What is Biochemical Engineering The application of chemical engineering

principles to conceive, design, develop, operate, or utilize processes and products based on biological and biochemical phenomena; this field is included in a wide range of industries, such as health care, pharmaceutical, agriculture, food, enzymes, chemicals, waste treatment, and energy.

It is the branch of chemical engineering which deals with the design and construction of unit processes that involve biological organisms and molecules.

Page 4: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

History of Biochemical Engineering In the discipline's initial stages,

biochemical engineers were chiefly concerned with optimizing the growth of microorganisms under aerobic conditions at scales of up to thousands of liters.

While the scope of the discipline has expanded, this focus remains. Often the aim is the development of an economical process to maximize biomass production (and hence a particular chemical, biochemical, or protein), taking into consideration raw-material and other operating costs.

Page 5: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

The elemental constituents of biomass (carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, and to a lesser extent phosphorus, sulfur, mineral salts, and trace amounts of certain metals) are added to the biological reactor (often called a fermentor) and consumed by the bacteria as they reproduce and carry out metabolic processes. Sufficient amounts of oxygen (usually supplied as sterile air) are added to the fermentor in such a way as to promote its availability to the growing culture.

Page 6: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

APPLICATIONS

BiotechnologyPharmaceutical EngineeringGenetic EngineeringBiomedical EngineeringWaste Water Treatment

Page 7: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

Challenges of Biochemical Engineer

Page 8: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?
Page 9: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

Fundamentals of Biochemical Engineering Microbiology

Biochemistry

Cell Growth Kinetics

Bioreactor Design

Applications Of Bioreactors In Chemical Engineering

Page 10: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

Microbiology Microbiology is the study of microorganisms,

which are unicellular or cell-cluster microscopic organisms.

  Micoorganism A microorganism or microbe is an organism that

is so small that it is microscopic (invisible to the naked eye).

Viruses Bacteria Algae FungiProtozoa

Page 11: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

CLASSIFICATION OF MICROBES

Kingdom protist

Bacteria Blue-Green Algae

Fungi Algae Protozoa

Molds Yeasts

Eucaryotes

Procaryotes

Page 12: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

Procarytoic Cell

Characteristics

No nuclear membrane (genetic material dispersed throughout cytoplasm)

No membrane-bound organelles

Simple internal structure

Most primitive type of cell (appeared about four billion years ago)

Page 13: BIO-CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. What is Chemical Engineering ?

Procarytoic Cell Structure Plasama Membrane: which serves as a diffusion barrier

between the cell and its environment. All living cells have plasma membranes.

Cell Wall: which is very different from the plasma membrane. One of the primary functions of the cell wall is physical support. Some kinds of bacterial cell walls also have other functions. Prokaryotic cell walls are composed at least partially of peptidoglycan, which is a kind of hybrid between polysaccharide and protein.

Nucleoid: which is an essentially imaginary "structure." This is the central region of the cell, where the DNA is largely located.

Naked DNA Ribosomes: The function of a ribosome is to make protein,

following instructions sent from the DNA's genes. Cytoplasm: fluid substance that fills the interior of the cell.

Cytoplasm is often described as a "rich, organic soup."