Oxygen diffusivity in gel beads containing viable cells

Abstract
This article proposes a simple steady-state method for measuring the effective diffusion coefficient of oxygen (De) in gel beads entrapping viable cells. We applied this method to the measurement of De in Ca- and Ba-alginate gel beads entrapping Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Pseudomonas ovalis. The diffusivity of oxygen through gel beads containing viable cells was measured within an accuracy of ±7% and found not to be influenced by cell density (0–30 g/L gel), cell type, and cell viability in gel beads. The oxygen diffusivity in the Ca-alginate gel beads was superior to that of the Ba-alginate gel beads, and the De in the Ca-alginate gel beads nearly equalled the molecular diffusion coefficient in the liquid containing the gel beads. The oxygen concentration profile in a single Ca-alginate gel bead was calculated and compared to the distribution of mycelia of Aspergillus awamori grown in that gel bead. This procedure indicated that the oxygen concentration profile is useful for the estimation of the thickness of the cell layer in a gel bead. Numerical investigation revealed that high effectiveness factors, greater than 0.8, could be obtained using microgel beads with a radius of 0.25 mm.