Continuous Cultivation of Microorganisms
Continuous culture can outperform batch culture by eliminating the
inherent down time for harvesting, cleaning, and sterilization and the long lags
before the organisms enter a brief period of high productivity.

T I M E , days
Note that there is a small percentage of the total time in which the rate of product formation
is near its maximum. It is sometimes possible to maintain very high rates of product formation
for long times with continuous cultivation.
Continuous culture is superior to batch culture in several ways for
research. Interpretation of results is difficult for batch culture
because of changing concentrations of products and reactants, varying pH
and redox potential, and a complicated mix of growing, dying, and dead
cells. Data from continuous cultures have much less complexity because
there are dynamic equilibria or small excursions from steady state.
Cause and effect relationships tend to be obvious. Although continuous
culture gets much more productivity from the bioreactor, there is not so
great an improvement over batch culture in terms of the total amount of
tanks and resources because there must be equipment for make up and
sterilization to support the continuously operated vessel.
Chapters
Lesson plan for Introduction to Biochemical Engineering
Lesson plan for Applied Microbiology
Lesson plan for Graduate Students
(c) 1995 H. Bungay