04 Fakultät Energie-, Verfahrens- und Biotechnik
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://elib.uni-stuttgart.de/handle/11682/5
Browse
679 results
Search Results
Item Open Access Precision 3D‐printed cell scaffolds mimicking native tissue composition and mechanics(2020) Erben, Amelie; Hörning, Marcel; Hartmann, Bastian; Becke, Tanja; Eisler, Stephan A.; Southan, Alexander; Cranz, Séverine; Hayden, Oliver; Kneidinger, Nikolaus; Königshoff, Melanie; Lindner, Michael; Tovar, Günter E. M.; Burgstaller, Gerald; Clausen‐Schaumann, Hauke; Sudhop, Stefanie; Heymann, MichaelCellular dynamics are modeled by the 3D architecture and mechanics of the extracellular matrix (ECM) and vice versa. These bidirectional cell‐ECM interactions are the basis for all vital tissues, many of which have been investigated in 2D environments over the last decades. Experimental approaches to mimic in vivo cell niches in 3D with the highest biological conformity and resolution can enable new insights into these cell‐ECM interactions including proliferation, differentiation, migration, and invasion assays. Here, two‐photon stereolithography is adopted to print up to mm‐sized high‐precision 3D cell scaffolds at micrometer resolution with defined mechanical properties from protein‐based resins, such as bovine serum albumin or gelatin methacryloyl. By modifying the manufacturing process including two‐pass printing or post‐print crosslinking, high precision scaffolds with varying Young's moduli ranging from 7‐300 kPa are printed and quantified through atomic force microscopy. The impact of varying scaffold topographies on the dynamics of colonizing cells is observed using mouse myoblast cells and a 3D‐lung microtissue replica colonized with primary human lung fibroblast. This approach will allow for a systematic investigation of single‐cell and tissue dynamics in response to defined mechanical and bio‐molecular cues and is ultimately scalable to full organs.Item Open Access Enhanced processing of regrind as recycling material in single-screw extruders(2021) Thieleke, Philipp; Bonten, ChristianRegrind processing poses challenges for single-screw extruders due to the irregularly shaped particles. For grooved feed zones, the output is lessened by the reduction of bulk density in comparison to virgin material. Simultaneously, the melt temperature increases, reducing the extruder’s process window. Through experimental investigations on a test stand, a novel feed zone geometry (nominal diameter 35 mm) is developed. It aligns the regrind’s specific throughput with that of virgin material. The regrind processing window is essentially increased. As the solids conveying in the novel feed zone cannot be simulated with existing methods, numerical simulations using the discrete element method are performed. Since plastic deformation occurs in the novel feed zone geometry, a new hysteresis contact model is developed. In addition to spheres, the regrind and virgin particles are modeled as superquadrics to better approximate the irregular shape. The new contact model’s simulation results show excellent agreement with experimental compression tests. The throughput of the extruder simulations is considerably underestimated when using spheres to represent the real particles than when using irregularly shaped superquadrics. Corresponding advantages can be seen especially for virgin material.Item Open Access Global potentials and costs of synfuels via Fischer-Tropsch process(2023) Buchenberg, Patrick; Addanki, Thushara; Franzmann, David; Winkler, Christoph; Lippkau, Felix; Hamacher, Thomas; Kuhn, Philipp; Heinrichs, Heidi; Blesl, MarkusThis paper presents the potentials and costs of synthetic fuels (synfuels) produced by renewable energy via PEM water electrolysis and the subsequent Fischer-Tropsch process for the years 2020, 2030, 2040, and 2050 in selected countries across the globe. The renewable energy potential was determined by the open-source tool pyGRETA and includes photovoltaic, onshore wind, and biomass. Carbon dioxide is obtained from biomass and the atmosphere by direct air capture. The potentials and costs were determined by aggregating minimal cost energy systems for each location on a state level. Each linear energy system was modelled and optimised by the optimisation framework urbs. The analysis focused on decentralised and off-grid synthetic fuels’ production. The transportation costs were roughly estimated based on the distance to the nearest maritime port for export. The distribution infrastructure was not considered since the already-existing infrastructure for fossil fuels can be easily adopted. The results showed that large amounts of synthetic fuels are available for EUR 110/MWh (USD 203/bbl) mainly in Africa, Central and South America, as well as Australia for 2050. This corresponds to a cost reduction of more than half compared to EUR 250/MWh (USD 461/bbl) in 2020. The synfuels’ potentials follow the photovoltaic potentials because of the corresponding low levelised cost of electricity. Batteries are in particular used for photovoltaic-dominant locations, and transportation costs are low compared to production costs.Item Open Access Energie und Klima: ist eine klimaverträgliche Energieversorgung erreichbar?(1991) Voß, AlfredUnter den Wissenschaftlern besteht weltweit Übereinstimmung, daß durch menschliche Tätigkeit freigesetzte Spurengase das Klima verändern. Unter diesen Spurengasen nimmt CO2 eine herausragende Rolle ein. Es gilt also, den CO2-Ausstoß zu verringern. Der Autor stellt die durch Energieumwandlungen entstehenden CO2-Emissionen vor und beschreibt mehrere Möglichkeiten einer CO2-Minderung. Hierbei geht er insbesondere auf die CO2-Reduktionsstrategien ein, wie sie für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland im Rahmen der Enquete-Kommission "Vorsorge zum Schutz der Erdatmosphäre" erarbeitet wurden.Item Open Access Findings from measurements of the electric power demand of air compressors(2021) Hummel, Ulf; Radgen, Peter; Ülker, Sercan; Schelle, RalphThe compressed air electric ratio (CAER) describes the ratio of the real electric power demand to the nominal mechanical power of an air compressor. The CAER is an important indicator as the electric power demand of air compressors varies throughout its operation dependent on compressor technology, pressure ratio, and free air delivery. The nameplate power of the compressor drive motor is not sufficient for evaluating the electric power demand; therefore, the CAER plays an important role in assessing the electric operating power demand. In this paper, results from measurements of fixed speed and variable speed (VFD) compressors are presented with the analysis of key influencing factors of the CAER. The data show that the pressure ratio of operating pressure to the maximum design outlet pressure has the largest impact on the CAER. For VFD compressors, the CAER is represented as a linear function dependent on the respective load. Fixed and variable speed compressors’ CAERs are always dependent on the load condition. In idle condition, the CAER was measured to be 0.2. In full load condition with a pressure ratio of 0.6, the CAER averages at a value of 0.87, meaning a 90 kW compressor at 0.6 pressure ratio draws 78.3 kW electric power.Item Open Access Biological effects of shock waves(1990) Brümmer, Franz; Bräuner, Thomas; Hülser, Dieter F.Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy has become established worldwide as the method of choice for the treatment of nephrolithiasis and ureterolithiasis over the last 10 years. Although initial studies showed no damaging effects of the shock waves on organs and tissues, numerous recent reports have presented evidence for severe acute effects and chronic complications after shock wave treatment. The pathophysiological effects on kidneys and the histopathological effects on organs or tissues in man and animal, and also the effects on cells in culture and tumors are sumarized. Suspended and immobilized cell cultures were used to characterize and quantify the efficacy of shock wave. Extended applications of shock waves and possible modifications to shock wave generators are discussed.Item Open Access Multi-criteria comparison of energy and environmental assessment approaches for the example of cooling towers(2022) Wenzel, Paula M.; Radgen, PeterCooling towers remove economically or technically unusable heat using considerable amounts of electricity and, in many cases, water. Several approaches, which vary in methodology, scope, and level of detail, are used for environmental evaluations of these cooling systems. Although the chosen approach has a significant impact on decisions made at the plant level, no methodology has yet been standardized for selecting the approach that best serves the objectives of the evaluation. Thus, this paper provides comparison criteria for the systematic selection of suitable evaluation methods for cooling towers and classifies how the methods score in this respect. These criteria, such as ‘life cycle thinking’, ‘inventoried physical quantities’, ‘temporal resolution’, ‘formalization’, and ‘data availability’, are grouped by overall evaluation objectives such as ‘thoroughness’, ‘scientific soundness’, and ‘usability’. Subsequently, these criteria were used to compare material flow analysis, energy analysis, environmental network analysis, life cycle inventory, life cycle assessment, environmental footprint methods, emergy analysis, exergy analysis, and the physical optimum method. In conclusion, material flow analysis is best suited for the analysis of cooling towers when impact assessment is not required; otherwise, life cycle assessment meets most of the defined criteria. Moreover, only exergy-based methods allow for the inclusion of volatile ambient conditions.Item Open Access Construction of a super-competent Bacillus subtilis 168 using the PmtlA-comKS inducible cassette(2015) Rahmer, Regine; Morabbi Heravi, Kambiz; Altenbuchner, JosefCompetence is a physiological state that enables Bacillus subtilis 168 to take up and internalize extracellular DNA. In practice, only a small subpopulation of B. subtilis 168 cells becomes competent when they enter stationary phase. In this study, we developed a new transformation method to improve the transformation efficiency of B. subtilis 168, specially in rich media. At first, different competence genes, namely comK, comS, and dprA, were alone or together integrated into the chromosome of B. subtilis 168 under control of mannitol-inducible PmtlA promoter. Overexpression of both comK and comS increased the transformation efficiency of B. subtilis REG19 with plasmid DNA by 6.7-fold compared to the wild type strain 168. This transformation efficiency reached its maximal level after 1.5 h of induction by mannitol. Besides, transformability of the REG19 cells was saturated in the presence of 100 ng dimeric plasmid or 3000 ng chromosomal DNA. Studying the influence of global regulators on the development of competence pointed out that important competence development factors, such as Spo0A, ComQXPA, and DegU, could be removed in REG19. On the other hand, efficient REG19 transformation remained highly dependent on the original copies of comK and comS regardless of the presence of PmtlA-comKS. Finally, novel plasmid-free strategies were used for transformation of REG19 based on Gibson assembly.Item Open Access A timed off-switch for dynamic control of gene expression in Corynebacterium glutamicum(2021) Siebert, Daniel; Altenbuchner, Josef; Blombach, BastianDynamic control of gene expression mainly relies on inducible systems, which require supplementation of (costly) inducer molecules. In contrast, synthetic regulatory circuits, which allow the timed shutdown of gene expression, are rarely available and therefore represent highly attractive tools for metabolic engineering. To achieve this, we utilized the VanR/PvanABK* regulatory system of Corynebacterium glutamicum, which consists of the transcriptional repressor VanR and a modified promoter of the vanABK operon (PvanABK*). VanR activity is modulated by one of the phenolic compounds ferulic acid, vanillin or vanillic acid, which are co-metabolized with d-glucose. Thus, gene expression in the presence of d-glucose is turned off if one of the effector molecules is depleted from the medium. To dynamically control the expression of the aceE gene, encoding the E1 subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex that is essential for growth on d-glucose, we replaced the native promoter by vanR/PvanABK* yielding C. glutamicum ΔPaceE::vanR-PvanABK*. The biomass yield of this strain increased linearly with the supplemented amount of effector. After consumption of the phenolic compounds growth ceased, however, C. glutamicumΔPaceE::vanR-PvanABK* continued to utilize the residual d-glucose to produce significant amounts of pyruvate, l-alanine, and l-valine. Interestingly, equimolar concentrations of the three phenolic compounds resulted in different biomass yields; and with increasing effector concentration, the product spectrum shifted from pyruvate over l-alanine to l-valine. To further test the suitability of the VanR/PvanABK* system, we overexpressed the l-valine biosynthesis genes ilvBNCE in C. glutamicum ΔPaceE::vanR-PvanABK*, which resulted in efficient l-valine production with a yield of about 0.36 mol l-valine per mol d-glucose. These results demonstrate that the VanR/PvanABK* system is a valuable tool to control gene expression in C. glutamicum in a timed manner by the cheap and abundant phenolic compounds ferulic acid, vanillin, and vanillic acid.Item Open Access Constitutive correlations for mass transport in fibrous media based on asymptotic homogenization(2023) Maier, Lukas; Kufferath-Sieberin, Lars; Pauly, Leon; Hopp-Hirschler, Manuel; Gresser, Götz T.; Nieken, UlrichMass transport in textiles is crucial. Knowledge of effective mass transport properties of textiles can be used to improve processes and applications where textiles are used. Mass transfer in knitted and woven fabrics strongly depends on the yarn used. In particular, the permeability and effective diffusion coefficient of yarns are of interest. Correlations are often used to estimate the mass transfer properties of yarns. These correlations commonly assume an ordered distribution, but here we demonstrate that an ordered distribution leads to an overestimation of mass transfer properties. We therefore address the impact of random ordering on the effective diffusivity and permeability of yarns and show that it is important to account for the random arrangement of fibers in order to predict mass transfer. To do this, Representative Volume Elements are randomly generated to represent the structure of yarns made from continuous filaments of synthetic materials. Furthermore, parallel, randomly arranged fibers with a circular cross-section are assumed. By solving the so-called cell problems on the Representative Volume Elements, transport coefficients can be calculated for given porosities. These transport coefficients, which are based on a digital reconstruction of the yarn and asymptotic homogenization, are then used to derive an improved correlation for the effective diffusivity and permeability as a function of porosity and fiber diameter. At porosities below 0.7, the predicted transport is significantly lower under the assumption of random ordering. The approach is not limited to circular fibers and may be extended to arbitrary fiber geometries.