Diffusive and convective transport through hollow fiber membranes for liver cell culture
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2005
abstract:
For an efficient membrane bioreactor design, transport phenomena determining the overall mass flux of metabolites, catabolites,
cell regulatory factors, and immune-related soluble factors, need to be clarified both experimentally and theoretically. In thiswork,
experiments and calculations aimed at discerning the simultaneous influence of both diffusive and convective mechanisms to the
transport of metabolites. In particular, the transmembrane mass flux of glucose, bovine serum albumin (BSA), APO-transferrin,
immunoglobulin G, and ammonia was experimentally measured, under pressure and concentration gradients, through high-flux
microporous hydrophilic poly-ether-sulphone (PES-HFMs) and poly-sulphone hollow fiber membranes (PS-HFMs).
These data were analyzed by means of a model based on the mechanism of capillary pore diffusion, assuming that solute
spherical molecules pass through an array of solvent-filled cylindrical pores with a diffusive permeation corrected for friction
and steric hindrances. Additionally, resistances to the mass transfer were taken into account. Convective permeation data were
discussed in terms of morphological properties of the polymeric membranes, molecular Stokes radius, and solute-membrane
interactions according to information given by contact angle measurements. The observed steady-state hydraulic permeance
of PS-HFMs was 0.972 L/m2 h mbar, about 15.6-fold lower than that measured for PES-HFMs (15.2 L/m2 h); in general, PSHFMs
provided a significant hindrance to the transport of target species. Diffusion coefficients of metabolites were found to
be similar to the corresponding values in water through PES-HFMs, but significantly reduced through PS-HFMs (DMembrane
Glucose = 2.8 × 10-6 ± 0.6 × 10-6 cm2/s, DMembrane
BSA = 6.4 × 10-7 ± 1 × 10-7 cm2/s, DMembrane
Apotransferrin = 2.3 × 10-7 ± 0.25 × 10-7 cm2/s).
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Hollow fiber membranes; Bioreactor; Transport characterization; Metabolite convection and diffusion
List of contributors:
Rende, Maria; Curcio, Efrem; Barbieri, Giuseppe; DE BARTOLO, Loredana; Giorno, Lidietta; Morelli, Sabrina
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