Microbiological control of a Milling Tandem
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Transcript Microbiological control of a Milling Tandem
Microbiological Control of a Milling
Tandem
Milling Seminar - May 11, 2005
Microbes are Everywhere
• Microbes Protect Themselves in
nature by:
• 1. growing as biofilms
• Resistant to penetration by
antimicrobials, important in
sugar mills
• Modifying or excluding
antibacterial agent
• 2. Forming spores
• Most resistant form of bacteria.
Generally found in sugar
Microbial Biofilm
(Heat Exchanger)
Commonly Found Genera in
Sugar Process Streams
• Gum Producers
• L. mesenteroides, L. dextranicum
• Yeast
• Saccharomyces, Torula, Pichia
• Common Bacteria
• includes Pseudomonas and Bacillus
• Filamentous Fungi
• Aspergillus, Penicillium, Streptomyces
Microorganisms in the Raw
House (processing problems)
• acid pH and high sugar concentrations in
juice favor growth of Streptococci and
Leuconostoc
• Microbial loading of sugar juices reflects
the bacteria flora of the source materials
• These gum forming microorganisms form
biofilms on the equipment and secrete
dextran in the process stream
Biofilms
Bacteria have the ability to colonize process
surfaces
this leads to build up of slime materials or
biofilms.
The biofilm can become an ecosystem with a wide
variety of pathogenic and spoilage microorganisms and
a penetration barrier for biocides.
Rod-shaped bacterium
Bacterial Biofilms
SEM image of six day old Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilm.
Processing Problems due to
Polysaccharide Producers
•
•
•
•
•
•
Direct loss of sucrose
Viscosity increase
crystal deformation
sugar loss to molasses
penalties
analytical interference
ppm Dextran
Economic Implications of
Dextran
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
1
47
46
45
44
43
42
41
40
39
38
37
36
Dextran
2
3
4
5
6
week
7
8
9
TP
Sugar Losses
• In Louisiana, molasses purity rise is 2.2 2.5 points/ 1000 ppm dextran in juice
• a rise in final molasses purity of one point is
equivalent to losing one pound of sugar to
molasses for every ton of cane processed
Role of a Biocide
• Control Dextran Formation
• Microbiocidal activity
• Minimize Biofilm Formation
• Residual Activity
• Protect Juice from Deterioration in Stagnant
Regions
• Residual Activity
Organic Biocides
• Two classes of compounds approved by
FDA for use in sugar processing
• Carbamates
• Quaternary Ammonium compounds
• “Quats” may not be present in molasses
sold for animal feed
Some Results:
Initial Trial: 92.17 hours at 30oC
No
HgCl2
NaN3
Biocide 200ppm 500ppm
5,10,15,20ppm
mDTC
NaN3 100ppm
mDTC 15 ppm
Results: Antibody Dextran on Brix
6.00
5.00
Ab Dextran, % brix
4.00
azide, 500 ppm
3.00
HgCl2, 200 ppm
mDTC, 5 ppm
mDTC, 10 ppm
2.00
mDTC, 15 ppm
mDTC, 20 ppm
100ppm:15ppm AmDTC
no biocide
1.00
0.00
0.00
10.00
20.00
30.00
40.00
50.00
Elapsed time, hr
60.00
70.00
80.00
90.00
Results: HPLC Sucrose on Brix
120.00
no biocide
HgCl2, 200ppm
mDTC,5ppm
mDTC, 10 ppm
mDTC, 15ppm
mDTC, 20ppm
100ppm:15ppm AmDTC
Azide, 500 ppm
100.00
Sucrose, % on bx
80.00
60.00
The Good
The Bad
40.00
20.00
The Ugly
0.00
0.00
10.00
20.00
30.00
40.00
50.00
Elapsed time, hr
60.00
70.00
80.00
90.00
Biocide Use (Louisiana 2001)
Mills
Biocide
A,B,C,G,
Q
D,I,P
Bleach
E,J,O,S
K
H
Location
Dose
(ppm)
?
Knives
Last mill
Busan 881 Knives
0 -18
Last Mill
Midland Last Mill 0.6 - 15
6001
Magnicide
10
Bleach +
Knives 21 and 10
Midland Last Mil
Control Measures in the Factory
• Strict Sanitation procedures
• Biocide application at earliest points where
juice can contact surfaces.
• The maintenance of residual biocide until
the juice heaters
Effective Dose Rate
7
Log cfu/ml
6
5
4
Bleach
3
Midland
2
1
0
0
5
10
ppm Biocide
15
20
Summary
• Microorganisms are ubiquitous
• The “environmental” conditions of the
sugar mill dictate which organisms will be
found
• Microorganisms will consume sugar
• Some microorganisms produce products
which have processing effects far exceeding
what would be expected based on their bulk
composition
Summary
• Microbial growth can be controlled at the
mill (but not eliminated) through judicious
cleaning (steam, hot water) on a routine
basis and by use of a biocide in hard to
clean areas
• All areas touched by juice can grow
biofilms and shed dextran into the
process.