The following is a table of typical activation energies:
| Material | Activation Energy, cal/mol |
|---|---|
| Folic acid | 16,800 |
| d-Panthothenyl alcohol | 21,000 |
| Cyanocobalamin | 23,100 |
| Thiamine hydrochloride | 22,000 |
| Bacillus stearothermophilus | 67,700 |
| Bacillus subtilus | 76,000 |
| Clostridium botulinu | 82,000 |
| Putrefactive anaerobe NCA 3679 | 72,400 |
The game considers not only the time at the sterilization temperature but the heat up and cool down periods. Heat transfer is quite good for small vessels, but the fraction of available heat transfer surface is less for large vessels, so it is difficult to heat up or cool down rapidly. Venting the vessel would give a precipitous drop in temperature as some of the contents evaporate, but this is accompanied by too much foaming to be practical. One way to get rapid heat transfer is to sterilize, not in the vessel, but in a heat exchanger. The fluid is pumped continuously, and there is excellent energy economy by letting the hot sterilized medium exchange with the incoming medium.
Continuous Sterilization of Media,