Ii. Analysis of The Bioethanol Process Controller
Ii. Analysis of The Bioethanol Process Controller
A. Process Description
The figure below illustrates ethanol production using a yeast fermenter with
constant substrate inflow and outflow. The reaction volume is maintained at constant
levels.
fermenter. Since the process is carried out in the presence of oxygen, a baker’s yeast
solution of glucose, which feeds the microorganisms, to the fermenter. For the
formation of coenzymes, inorganic salts are added together with the biomass. The
salts because of the salting-out effect. Yeast hydrolyses glucose into ethanol and
carbon dioxide. The contents of the reactor are biomass, substrate, and product. The
The mathematical model used is the Monod equation derived from Michaelis-
Menten kinetics for the growth of microorganism which has been proposed and
behavior of the yeast and the development of ethanol. At higher temperatures, yeast
tends to grow faster than low temperatures and generate ethanol by fermentation. The
same concentration of alcohol promotes cell death, which at higher temperatures will
also be faster, resulting in a faster decay of living cells. The optimal method is
E μi
μi= μ i0 exp (− )
RT , i = G, M, N (1)
E Ki
K i= K i 0 exp (− )
RT , i = G, M, N (2)
EK ' i
K 'i= K ' i0 exp(− )
RT , i = G, M, N (3)
The dynamic equations describing the cell growth, product formation and
utilization for cell growth ( GsX ) and substrate utilization for maintenance energy
( MsX ).
dX
=μX - k d X
dt (4a)
dP
=qX + M p X
dt (4b)
dS μX qX
=− - -G X -M S X
dt YX YP S (4c)
Modeling Specific Growth Rate, Cell Growth Rate, Sugar Consumption, Ethanol
Production, Temperature and Fusel Alcohol are needed for the development of the
μG G
μ1 =
K G+ G (5)
μM M K 'G
μ2 =
K M +M K ' G +G (6)
μN N K 'G K'M
μ3 =
K N +N K ' G+G K ' M +M (7)
the saturation constant for the sugar i, and K’I, is the constant of inhibition
a. Glucose
dG
=−μ1 X
dt (8)
b. Maltose
dM
=−μ 2 X
dt (9)
c. Maltotriose
dN
=−μ3 X
dt (10)
the preferred sugar (G) is first used until its complete exhaustion; the second
sugar (M) of intermediate preference is consumed; and finally, the third sugar
dX
=μ X X
dt
Where
μ X = (Y XG μ1 +Y XG μ1 +Y XM μ 2 +Y XN μ3 ) (11)
Based on biological data µ(S), the specific growth rate is often defined by
a classical function. The specific growth rate µ(S) is related to the concentration
The availability of unsaturated fatty acids and lipids in the wort limits
the growth of yeast. The cell division cycle can only continue as long as the
synthesized in the cells. The cell cannot synthesize unsaturated fatty acids in
condition of the fermenter, the available unsaturated fatty acids in the media
The balance for the biomass growth rate yields the following equation:
KX
μ X = ( Y XG μ1 + Y XM μ2 +Y XN μ 3)
K X +( X -X 0 )2 (12)
dT x UA (T -T f )
=− ( ΔH 1 μ1 +ΔH 2 μ2 + ΔH 3 μ3 )−
dt ρ Cp ρ CpV (14)
b. For the Cooling Jacket
dT j FC UA(T -T j )
= (T C -T j )+
dt V j ρC CpC V j (15)
dIB
= Y IB μV X
dt (16)
dIA
= Y IA μ L X
dt (17)
dMB
= Y MB μ I X
dt (18)
dP
= Y PE ( μV +μ I ) X
dt (19)
Wherein,
1 dV
μV = −
X dt (20)
1 dL
μ L= −
X dt (21)
1 dI
μI = −
X dt (22)
C. Controller Implementation
temperature in the fermentation tank. This is efficient for fermentation tank which are
section simulates the actual behavior of the industrial yeast fermentation continuous
MATLAB Simulink. Simulink block diagram is shown in Figure 2.3 followed by its
corresponding response.
Figure 2.3 Simulink model of a yeast fermenter.
Figure 2.4a Yeast Concentration (g/l) Figure 2.4b Ethanol Concentration (g/l)
Figure 2.4c Glucose Concentration (g/l) Figure 2.4d Oxygen Concentration (g/l)
Figure 2.4e Temperature of the reactor (⁰C)
of 25–23°C.
Figures 2.4 present the response of the batch fermenter to step decrease in the
substrate inlet temperature (from 25 to 23°C). When the substrate inlet temperature
suddenly decreased from its nominal value to 23°C and settled at this new steady state,
the temperature of the reactor and the jacket initially decreased, and finally achieved
new steady states lower than their respective nominal values. The decrease in the
Figure 2.5a Yeast Concentration (g/l) Figure 2.5b Ethanol Concentration (g/l)
Figure 2.5c Glucose Concentration (g/l) Figure 2.5d Oxygen Concentration (g/l)
The substrate inlet concentration (Figures 2.5) has almost negligible impact on
the reactor temperature, the jacket temperature, and the concentration of oxygen but
can significantly change the concentration of yeast, glucose (i.e., substrate) and
ethanol.
Figure 2.6a Yeast Concentration (g/l) Figure 2.6b Ethanol Concentration (g/l)
Figure 2.6c Glucose Concentration (g/l) Figure 2.6d Oxygen Concentration (g/l)
A unit step increase in the substrate inlet flow rate (Figures 2.6) greatly
amplified the yeast concentration, the oxygen concentration, and the product
concentration but induced the glucose concentration to decay. For the increased flow
rate of substrate, the mathematical model accurately predicts the increased product,
bioreactor.
Figure 2.7a Yeast Concentration (g/l) Figure 2.7b Ethanol Concentration (g/l)
Figure 2.7c Glucose Concentration (g/l) Figure 2.7d Oxygen Concentration (g/l)
18–25 L/h.
For the abrupt increase in the coolant inlet flow rate (Figures 2.7), the jacket
temperature dropped immediately, but within a short period of time, the jacket
started gaining enough heat so that the jacket temperature was increasing slowly until
reaching the new steady state. Because of increased reactor and jacket temperature,
the product concentration increased. The substrate inlet flow rate can serve as a
manipulated variable to regulate the product concentration, and the remaining input
substrate.
processes are available in the chemical and biochemical industries and which
k p e−Θs
G p=
(τ 1 s+1 )(τ 2 s+1 ) (23)
Gp indicates the process transfer function, IMC controller is denoted by
equation:
Controller C(s) obtained in the Eq. (24) is not in the standard form of the PID
controller. Hence, Eq. (24) is simplified to the standard form of the PID with a lag
filter in series. Using the Taylor series, the time delay term approximated as
e−θs =1−θs in Eq. (24) and the controller can be written in the form of
(a 1 s 2 +a 2 s+1)( β 2 s 2 β 1 s+1)
C( s )=
K p (4 λ−β 1 +θ+ p )s [ χ 1 s3 + χ 2 s2 + χ 3 s+1 ]
2 2
(a 1 s +a 2 s+ 1)( β 2 s β 1 s+ 1)
=
K p hs[ χ 1 s3 + χ 2 s 2 + χ 3 s+1 ] (26)
Where,
h=(4 λ−β 1 + θ+ p )
(27)
χ 1 =( λ 4 − p θβ1 ) (28)
3
χ 2 =( 4 λ − p θβ 1 +θβ 2 + pβ 2 ) (29)
(31)
Upon equating the corresponding coefficients on both sides of Eq. (31), we get
χ 1 =γa 1 (32)
χ 2 =γa 2 +a 1
(33)
χ 3 =γ +a2 (34)
By solving Eqs. (30) and (32), the coefficients β1, β2 and γ are calculated as:
y 4 z1 − y 2 z 2
β 1=
y 1 z4− y 2 z3 (35)
β 1 y 1−z 1
β 2=
y2
(36)
χ1
γ=
a1
(37)
Where,
y 1 =a1 pθ−a
12 (38)
(39)
(40)
y 4 =a1− pθ (41)
1 1
C( s )=K c 1+
( τi s )
+τ D s
αs+1
(51)
Where,
λ = tuning parameter
β1
Kc=
K ph (52)
τ i =β 1
(53)
β2
τ D=
β1 (54)
χ1
α =γ =
a1 (55)
Finally, the last transfer function model to describe the plant is a second-order
obtaining a transfer function for each. These transfer functions can now be
combined so that the overall system is represented by the block diagram in the
figure below.