Tesis
Aplicação de CLEA de β-amilase de cevada na produção de maltose a partir de amido residual do bagaço de mandioca em reator de fluxo em vórtices
Fecha
2015-03-31Registro en:
Autor
Silva, Rafael de Araujo
Institución
Resumen
Cassava is cultivated worldwide, being Brazil the fourth largest producer. The root
industrial processing in the country, aiming to obtain mainly flour and starch, generates
carbohydrate-rich residues (e.g., starch, cellulose, and hemicellulose), which could be
used to produce value-added products by enzymatic route, mainly using immobilized
enzymes that are more operationally stable, allowing to be easily recovered and reused in
the process. Thus, this work aimed the biotransformation of residual starch from cassava
processing in maltose, using immobilized β-amylase in a Couette–Taylor–Poiseuille
vortex flow reactor, which can promote perfect mixture under lower shear stress in the
reactional medium compared to the conventional stirred-tank reactor. Cassava bagasse
and peel of two starch-processing industries from São Paulo State were physicalchemically
characterized and showed about 47% and 55% (dry mass) of residual starch,
respectively. The starch was enzymatically extracted from the residues using a α-
amylase, followed by maltose production catalyzed by immobilized barley β-amylase.
Among the immobilization methods studied in this work, the best one for β-amylase was
protein aggregation using bovine serum albumin (BSA) or soybean protein (PS) as
protein feeder, followed by cross-linking with glutaraldehyde (CLEA technique). This
protocol yielded immobilized β-amylase with 82.67% and 53.26% of recovered activity,
respectively. Besides, the CLEAs were highly stables at 40oC, retaining more than 80%
of the initial activity after 12 hours. The maltose syrup production from starch was
performed using a Couette–Taylor–Poiseuille vortex flow reactor, in order to evaluate the
β-amylase CLEAs (in this case CLEA of β-amylase prepared with soybean protein, here
named CLEA-β-PS). It was achieved around 70% of maltose conversion in a short
reaction time (4 hours), showing that is viable the use of residual starch as raw material
for the production of maltose catalyzed by β-amylase CLEA in a Couette–Taylor–
Poiseuille vortex flow reactor.