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A New Possibility for Fermentation Monitoring by Electrical Driven Sensing of Ultraviolet Light and Glucose

Industrial fermentation generates products through microbial growth associated with the consumption of substrates. The efficiency of industrial production of high commercial value microbial products such as ethanol from glucose (GLU) is dependent on bacterial contamination. Controlling the sugar con...

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Autores principales: Amorim, Cleber A., Blanco, Kate C., Costa, Ivani M., de Araújo, Estácio P., Arantes, Adryelle do Nascimento, Contiero, Jonas, Chiquito, Adenilson J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7459838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32806501
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bios10080097
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author Amorim, Cleber A.
Blanco, Kate C.
Costa, Ivani M.
de Araújo, Estácio P.
Arantes, Adryelle do Nascimento
Contiero, Jonas
Chiquito, Adenilson J.
author_facet Amorim, Cleber A.
Blanco, Kate C.
Costa, Ivani M.
de Araújo, Estácio P.
Arantes, Adryelle do Nascimento
Contiero, Jonas
Chiquito, Adenilson J.
author_sort Amorim, Cleber A.
collection PubMed
description Industrial fermentation generates products through microbial growth associated with the consumption of substrates. The efficiency of industrial production of high commercial value microbial products such as ethanol from glucose (GLU) is dependent on bacterial contamination. Controlling the sugar conversion into products as well as the sterility of the fermentation process are objectives to be considered here by studying GLU and ultraviolet light (UV) sensors. In this work, we present two different approaches of SnO(2) nanowires grown by the Vapor–Liquid–Solid (VLS) method. In the GLU sensor, we use SnO(2) nanowires as active electrodes, while for the UV sensor, a nanowire film was built for detection. The results showed a wide range of GLU sensing and as well as a significant influence of UV in the electrical signal. The effect of a wide range of GLU concentrations on the responsiveness of the sensor through current–voltage based on SnO(2) nanowire films under different concentration conditions ranging was verified from 1 to 1000 mmol. UV sensors show a typical amperometric response of SnO(2) nanowires under the excitation of UV and GLU in ten cycles of 300 s with 1.0 V observing a stable and reliable amperometric response. GLU and UV sensors proved to have a promising potential for detection and to control the conversion of a substrate into a product by GLU control and decontamination by UV control in industrial fermentation systems.
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spelling pubmed-74598382020-09-02 A New Possibility for Fermentation Monitoring by Electrical Driven Sensing of Ultraviolet Light and Glucose Amorim, Cleber A. Blanco, Kate C. Costa, Ivani M. de Araújo, Estácio P. Arantes, Adryelle do Nascimento Contiero, Jonas Chiquito, Adenilson J. Biosensors (Basel) Article Industrial fermentation generates products through microbial growth associated with the consumption of substrates. The efficiency of industrial production of high commercial value microbial products such as ethanol from glucose (GLU) is dependent on bacterial contamination. Controlling the sugar conversion into products as well as the sterility of the fermentation process are objectives to be considered here by studying GLU and ultraviolet light (UV) sensors. In this work, we present two different approaches of SnO(2) nanowires grown by the Vapor–Liquid–Solid (VLS) method. In the GLU sensor, we use SnO(2) nanowires as active electrodes, while for the UV sensor, a nanowire film was built for detection. The results showed a wide range of GLU sensing and as well as a significant influence of UV in the electrical signal. The effect of a wide range of GLU concentrations on the responsiveness of the sensor through current–voltage based on SnO(2) nanowire films under different concentration conditions ranging was verified from 1 to 1000 mmol. UV sensors show a typical amperometric response of SnO(2) nanowires under the excitation of UV and GLU in ten cycles of 300 s with 1.0 V observing a stable and reliable amperometric response. GLU and UV sensors proved to have a promising potential for detection and to control the conversion of a substrate into a product by GLU control and decontamination by UV control in industrial fermentation systems. MDPI 2020-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7459838/ /pubmed/32806501 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bios10080097 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Amorim, Cleber A.
Blanco, Kate C.
Costa, Ivani M.
de Araújo, Estácio P.
Arantes, Adryelle do Nascimento
Contiero, Jonas
Chiquito, Adenilson J.
A New Possibility for Fermentation Monitoring by Electrical Driven Sensing of Ultraviolet Light and Glucose
title A New Possibility for Fermentation Monitoring by Electrical Driven Sensing of Ultraviolet Light and Glucose
title_full A New Possibility for Fermentation Monitoring by Electrical Driven Sensing of Ultraviolet Light and Glucose
title_fullStr A New Possibility for Fermentation Monitoring by Electrical Driven Sensing of Ultraviolet Light and Glucose
title_full_unstemmed A New Possibility for Fermentation Monitoring by Electrical Driven Sensing of Ultraviolet Light and Glucose
title_short A New Possibility for Fermentation Monitoring by Electrical Driven Sensing of Ultraviolet Light and Glucose
title_sort new possibility for fermentation monitoring by electrical driven sensing of ultraviolet light and glucose
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7459838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32806501
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bios10080097
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