Successful Scale-Up for High-Density Microbial Processes
App Note / Case Study
Published: April 9, 2025

Credit: Biovectra
Single-use technologies have revolutionized mammalian cell culture in biopharmaceutical manufacturing, but their adoption for microbial fermentation has been limited due to the greater demand for cooling capacity and mass transfer required by these processes.
However, recent advances in single-use fermenter technology have overcome these barriers, enabling successful large-scale microbial production with the flexibility that contract development and manufacturing organizations (CDMOs) need.
This application note highlights the successful 5-fold scale-up of a high-cell density E. coli process from an established 200 L stainless steel fermenter to a 1000 L single-use system.
Download this application note to learn:
- How advanced single-use fermenter design addresses the unique requirements of microbial processes
- Key considerations for successful technology transfer and scale-up between stainless steel and single-use systems
- How CDMOs can leverage single-use fermentation technology to enhance manufacturing flexibility
Cameron Graham, P. Eng.
BIOVECTRA,
11 Aviation Avenue,
Charlottetown,
PE C1E 0A1, CANADA
www.biovectra.com
Rosane Rech, PhD.
ABEC Inc.,
3998 Schelden Circle,
Bethlehem,
PA 18017, USA
www.abec.com
rrech@abec.com
August 2024
Technology Transfer and ScaleUp of a High-Density E. coli
Fermentation from a 200 L
Stainless Steel to a 1000 L
Single-use Fermenter
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While biopharmaceutical CDMOs (Contract Development
and Manufacturing Organizations) have widely embraced
single-use technologies for mammalian cell culture,
their adoption for microbial fermentation applications
has been slow. In contrast to single-use bioreactors
that are available in volumes up to 6000 L, single-use
fermenters are mostly restricted to volumes up to 300 L,
with the ABEC single-use fermenter being the only one
available up to 1000 L. The challenges associated to the
development of production-scale single-use fermenters
are related to the high demands of cooling capacity and
mass transfer due to the higher oxygen consumption
and metabolic heat production of microbial applications
compared to mammalian cells. Not only does the singleuse fermenter design need to be capable of achieving
the required mass and heat transfer demands, but the
single-use components also must be robust to cope with
the mechanical stress of the higher agitation and gas flow
rates.
ABEC’s Custom Single Run (CSR®) single-use technology
has overcome these challenges. Leveraging 50 years
of fermenter design experience, ABEC engineered its
CSR® bioreactors and fermenters to provide the same
performance and scalability as stainless-steel systems.
As a result, ABEC offers CSR® fermenters up to 1000 L
whose designs are similar to conventional stainless-steel
vessels. In addition, key design attributes such as agitators,
spargers, and instrumentation can be customized for
specific processes.
BIOVECTRA has extensive experience in microbial
fermentation producing commercial quantities of drug
substance for its clients within a GMP environment. As a
CDMO, flexibility is a key consideration for BIOVECTRA
when choosing new equipment for manufacturing, making
single-use technologies more suitable than their stainlesssteel counterparts for use in clinical scale manufacturing.
This was demonstrated by a requirement to scale up a
fermentation process established in a stainless-steel
200 L fermenter when BIOVECTRA selected ABEC’s singleuse 1000 L CSR® fermenter for achieving its need for a
large-scale microbial process, combining the flexibility of
single-use equipment with the high heat and mass transfer
capabilities characteristic from ABEC’s CSR® fermenters.
This paper demonstrates the successful scale-up up
of a high-cell density Escherichia coli process from
an established 200 L stainless-steel fermenter to a
1000 L CSR® single-use fermenter. Typical fermenter
characterization and scale-up techniques were used
to ensure similar mass transfer and process control
performance between the two systems. Key process
control parameters were measured and compared, and
similar E. coli growth was achieved seamlessly in the first
microbial culture performed in the 1000 L CSR® fermenter.
Introduction
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Methodology
Scale-up Approach
Oxygen is a key substrate for microbial growth,
maintenance, and other metabolic routes, including product
biosynthesis. However, due to its low solubility, oxygen must
be continuously fed into the system through aeration. The
oxygen transfer rate (OTR, mmol/(L s)) from the gas to the
liquid broth in a fermenter or bioreactor vessel is calculated
by the product between the mass transfer coefficient of
the liquid side, (k�, m/s), the specific surface area for
the mass transfer (a, m²/m³), and the gradient of oxygen
concentration between the interface with the aeration gas
(C*, mmol/L) and the liquid broth (C, mmol/L):
Along with heat transfer (cooling), OTR stands as a
limiting factor for high-cell density microbial cultures.
Experimentally, it is not possible to determine individually
the parameters kL and a, thus they are lumped together
as one single parameter called volumetric oxygen mass
transfer coefficient (kL a, s-1). The most widely used
empirical equation to correlate kLa to the operation
parameters of a fermenter was proposed by Van’t Riet (1979)
and relates the kLa to the mixing power input in the gassed
broth (P, W), per volume of fluid (V, m³), and the superficial
gas velocity (vs, m/s):
For non-viscous systems, the exponents α equal to 0.4 and
β equal to 0.5 are the most frequently used to describe the
k�a behavior with P/V and vs (Garcia-Ochoa and Gomez,
2009). The parameter k depends on the geometry of the
vessel and culture temperature and is used as 0.55 in this
work.
The mixing power input is directly correlated to the impeller
diameter (Di
, m) and rotation (N, s-1) by:
Where NP
is the impeller power number, ρ is the fluid
density (kg/m³) and K is the gassing factor, which depends
on the impeller shape and Froude number (NFr), and on the
aeration (or gas flow) number (NA) (Paul et al, 2004):
Where Q is the volumetric gas flow rate (Q, m³/s) and g is
gravity (9.81 m/s²).
The superficial gas velocity is given by the ratio between the
volumetric gas flow rate (Q, m³/s) and the cross-sectional
area of the vessel:
Where DT
is the vessel diameter (m).
Considering the importance of keeping similar oxygen
transfer across different scales, a traditional scale up
approach maintaining constant gassed P/V to scale
agitation rate (N), and constant superficial gas velocity to
scale the gas flow rate (Q) was used in this study.
Using equations (3) and (6), the gas flow rate and the
agitation rate were scaled up from the established process
parameters in the 200 L stainless steel fermenter to the
1000 L CSR® fermenter. Current and scaled up process
parameters are shown in Table 1.
The process was operated at approximately 7.5 psig of
head pressure in the 200 L stainless steel fermenter; for
scale up to the 1000 L CSR single-use fermenter, the
head pressure was limited to approximately 0.3 psig.
The decrease in head pressure results in a decrease in
the driving force for the oxygen concentration gradient
from equation (1); therefore an increase in the oxygen
ratio supplied through the gas flow rate Q was required to
maintain the necessary OTR.
𝑂𝑂𝑂𝑂𝑂𝑂𝑂𝑂𝑂𝑂𝑂𝑂 = 𝑘𝑘𝑘𝑘𝐿𝐿𝐿𝐿𝑎𝑎𝑎𝑎(𝐶𝐶𝐶𝐶∗ − 𝐶𝐶𝐶𝐶)
𝑘𝑘𝑘𝑘𝐿𝐿𝐿𝐿𝑎𝑎𝑎𝑎 = 𝑘𝑘𝑘𝑘 �
𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃
𝑉𝑉𝑉𝑉
�
𝛼𝛼𝛼𝛼
𝑣𝑣𝑣𝑣𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆
𝛽𝛽𝛽𝛽
𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃 = 𝐾𝐾𝐾𝐾 ∙ 𝑁𝑁𝑁𝑁𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑁𝑁𝑁𝑁3𝐷𝐷𝐷𝐷𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖
5𝜌𝜌𝜌𝜌
𝑁𝑁𝑁𝑁𝐴𝐴𝐴𝐴 = 𝑄𝑄𝑄𝑄
𝑁𝑁𝑁𝑁𝐷𝐷𝐷𝐷𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖
3 𝑁𝑁𝑁𝑁𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹 = 𝑁𝑁𝑁𝑁𝐷𝐷𝐷𝐷2
𝑔𝑔𝑔𝑔
𝑣𝑣𝑣𝑣𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆 = 4𝑄𝑄𝑄𝑄
𝜋𝜋𝜋𝜋𝐷𝐷𝐷𝐷𝑇𝑇𝑇𝑇
2
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(6)
(5)
SSF 200 L CSR® 1000 L
Working volume, V 190 L 800 L
Maximum agitation rate, N 7.1 s-1
(423 rpm)
3.83 s-1
(230 rpm)
Gas flow rate, Q 0.00472 m³/s
(283 slpm)
0.010 m³/s
(600 slpm)
Aeration number, NA 0.057 0.050
Froude number, NFr 1.01 0.55
Power per volume, P/V 4.18 kW/m³ 3.93 kW/m³
Superficial gas velocity, vS 0.0165 m/s 0.0163 m/s
Head Pressure, P 7.5 psig 0.3 psig
Oxygen % in Gas flow rate 30% 50%
Volumetric oxygen mass
transfer coefficient, kL
a
0.125 s-1
(451 h-1)
0.124 s-1
(447 h-1)
Table 1:
Scale-up parameters from the 200-L stainless steel fermenter (SS 200 L)
to the 1000-L Custom Single Run fermenter (CSR® 1000 L)
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The fed-batch high-cell density process was carried out
in an ABEC CSR® fermenter that has a maximum working
volume of 1000 L (Figure 1). The single-use fermenter was
designed with three six-flat-blade impellers (Rushton)
with a Di
:DT ratio of 0.43. The fermenter controller has
the capabilities of pH control by acid/base addition,
and dissolved oxygen control by a cascade of agitation
rate, gas flow rate and oxygen enrichment of the inlet
gas. Extra ports for feed addition are also available.
Feed can be added according to a pre-defined profile or
changed manually throughout the process. Temperature
is maintained at the target setpoint by flowing chiller fluid
through the fermenter jacket.
A proprietary E. coli strain was grown in shake flasks that
were used to inoculate the fermenter. The process started
as batch culture with 632 L of culture medium. The feed
(54% glycerol) started at 3 h fermentation time and was
increased stepwise hourly until a final volume of 800 L.
Temperature was controlled at 32°C through the use of
chiller fluid (-8°C) in the fermenter jacket, and pH was
controlled at 7.0 ± 0.1 through the addition of ammonium
hydroxide.
Dissolved oxygen was controlled at the setpoint of 13% of
air saturation by first increasing the agitation rate to the
maximum speed of 230 rpm (P/V≅ 4 kW/m³), followed by
the enrichment of the gas flow with pure oxygen. Gas flow
rate was kept constant at 600 L/min (vS
= 0.0163 m/s). The
dissolved oxygen setpoint was increased from 10% in the
200 L stainless steel fermenter to account for the reduction
in the saturation solubility of oxygen in the broth due to
the lower head pressure in the 1000 L CSR.
OTR was estimated during the culture through material
balance between the oxygen concentration in the inlet
and exhaust gas.
Fed-batch cultivation in the 1000L CSR® fermenter
Figure 1: Single-use 1000 L fermenter holder and control unit.
Figure 2: Single-use Rushton impeller for CSR® fermenters.
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Results
Figure 3 compares the E. coli biomass yield in the 200 L
stainless steel and the 1000 L CSR® fermenters measured
as optical density at 583 nm (OD583). Both fermenters
showed very similar growth curves, demonstrating that the
scale up of microbial processes in single-use fermenters
can be accomplished by using traditional transfer of scale
approaches, constant P/V and vS in this work, and that the
1000 L CSR® can achieve similar heat and mass transfer to
its stainless-steel counterpart.
Maintaining an adequate oxygen supply during a
fermentation process is a key factor for a successful
fermentation. Figure 4a compares the dissolved
oxygen (DO) profile recorded during the process in both
fermenters, and Figure 4b shows the calculated oxygen
transfer rate. Results show an overlap between the DO
profiles of the two fermenter scales, that decreased from
100% of air saturation reaching the setpoint of 10% to
13% (a.s.) around 5 h of elapsed fermentation time. After
reaching the setpoint, both fermenters were able to keep a
steady dissolved oxygen concentration over the remaining
of the process. The two fermenters also presented high
similarity between their OTR profiles. The OTR peak
observed in the 1000 L CSR® fermenter is likely to be the
response to an issue with the chiller used for temperature
control, which allowed the temperature to briefly reach
37°C around 10 h of elapsed fermentation time
(Figure 6), increasing the cell metabolism and the rate of
oxygen consumption by the culture as a consequence.
The OTR in a fermenter is a function of the mixing power
per volume, P/V, that directly influences the volumetric
mass transfer coefficient, kL
a (h-1), and of the difference
between oxygen concentration in the gas and liquid
phases. In the featured fermentation process, the
dissolved oxygen is controlled both by increasing P/V
(agitation rate) and by the enrichment of oxygen in the gas
phase. Figure 5 compares the evolution of P/V and gas
composition over the course of the fermentation process.
P/V starts to ramp up around 4 h of elapsed fermentation
time in both processes. In the 200 L SSF and the 1000 L
CSR®, P/V increases until it reaches its scale-up target
(4 kW/m³), then DO control switches to oxygen enrichment
in the inlet gas. The oxygen usage was higher in the
1000 L CSR® as shown in Figure 5b; this was expected
due to reduction in head pressure at the 1000 L scale.
However, in face of the higher oxygen consumption
in the 1000 L CSR® at approximately 10 h of elapsed
fermentation time, the P/V was allowed to increase to
5.7 kW/m³ to lower the amount of pure oxygen in the inlet
gas and meet the higher demand of oxygen by the culture
due to the higher temperature. The period of high oxygen
consumption noted above would not be expected during
normal chiller operation. The higher percentage of oxygen
usage in the 1000 L CSR compared to the 200 L SSF
aligned with the prediction from Table 1.
The similar biomass yield and consistent DO levels
throughout the process in both systems emphasize that
the oxygen demand of the cells is being met, ensuring
optimal conditions for cell growth and productivity. This
demonstrates the ability to effectively reproduce results
obtained in stainless steel fermenters in large scale singleuse units. The success can be attributed to a suitable
scale-up strategy combined with the high performance
of the 1000 L CSR® fermenter. The resulting product from
both the 200 L SSF and the 1000 L CSR® met all quality
attributes as tested at the end of the fermentation.
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
OD583
Time [h]
CSR 1000 L
SSF 200 L
Figure 3 : Biomass measured as optical density (OD) in the 200 L
stainless-steel fermenter (SSF 200 L, OD measured at 600 nm) and ABEC’s
1000 L single-use CSR fermenter (CSR 1000 L, OD measured at 583 nm).
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
Dissolved Oxygen (%)
Time [h]
CSR 1000 L
SSF 200 L
(a)
Setpoint= 10%
0
100
200
300
400
500
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
OTR (mmol/(L h)
Time [h]
CSR 1000 L
SSF 200 L
(b)
Figure 4 : Dissolved oxygen (a) and oxygen transfer rate (OTR, b)
comparison between the 200 L stainless-steel fermenter (SSF 200 L) and
ABEC’s 1000 L single-use CSR fermenter (CSR 1000 L).
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Figure 5: Dissolved oxygen control cascade comparison between the 200 L stainless-steel fermenter (SSF 200 L) and ABEC’s 1000 L single-use CSR
fermenter (CSR 1000 L): (a) mixing power per volume of in the gassed fermenter; and (b) oxygen flow rate calculated as the percentage of pure oxygen
added in the gas flow.
30
32
34
36
38
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
Temperature (°C)
Time [h]
CSR 1000 L
SSF 200 L
Figure 6: Temperature comparison between the 200 L stainless-steel
fermenter (SSF 200 L) and ABEC’s 1000 L single-use CSR fermenter (CSR
1000 L)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
Oxygen Flow Rate (%)
Time [h]
CSR 1000 L
SSF 200 L
(b)
Conclusion
The successful transfer and 5-fold scale-up of a high-cell
density microbial process between stainless steel and
single-use systems demonstrates the suitability of singleuse fermenters for large-scale production of microbial drug
substance. The single-use technology brings the capability
of quickly switching between different processes in the
same vessel, flexibility that is key for CDMOs producing a
variety of biomolecules for different customers. In addition,
the single-use CSR® units are highly customizable; thus,
a single holder can accommodate several custom CSR®
configurations, designed to meet the demands of each
individual process application.
References
Van’t Riet, Klaas. 1979. “Review of Measuring Methods and Results in Nonviscous Gas-Liquid Mass Transfer in Stirred
Vessels.” Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Process Design and Development, 357–64.
https://doi.org/10.1021/i260071a001
Garcia-Ochoa, Felix, and Emilio Gomez. 2009. “Bioreactor Scale-Up and Oxygen Transfer Rate in Microbial Processes: An
Overview.” Biotechnology Advances, 153–76.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biotechadv.2008.10.006
Paul, Edward L, Victor A Atiemo-Obeng, and Suzanne M Kresta. 2004.
Handbook of Industrial Mixing : Science and Practice. Hoboken, N.J: Wiley-Interscience.
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
P/V (W/m³)
Time [h]
CSR 1000 L
SSF 200 L
(a)
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