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Ester Hydrolysis Reactor. Emily Brennan Justin Hewitt Fiona Rask. Purpose of Unit. Takes output from anion exchanger Converts insulin ester into pure insulin Output to HPLC for final purification steps. Hydrolysis Reaction.
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Ester Hydrolysis Reactor Emily Brennan Justin Hewitt Fiona Rask
Purpose of Unit • Takes output from anion exchanger • Converts insulin ester into pure insulin • Output to HPLC for final purification steps
Hydrolysis Reaction • Cleaves a methyl group from insulin precursor using acid catalyst (HCl) • Allows folding into active conformation
Neutralization Reaction • Residual sodium hydroxide from anion exchanger is neutralized • Use hydrochloric acid NaOH + HCl H2O + NaCl
Reactor Selection • Continuous reactor selected • Operated in lots to ensure quality assurance requirements are met • Higher productivity than batch • Smaller volume required for same conversion VS
Reactor Configuration • 3 reactors in parallel • One reactor running continually to process an upstream lot • Other reactors cleaned/maintained during operation
Design Assumptions • 96% reaction extent for hydrolysis • 100% reaction extent for neutralization • Operation time: 330 days/year • Production of insulin crystal: 4065 kg/year
Design Specifications • Acid inlet: 15.8 L/h • Upstream process inlet: 19.7 L/h • Residence time estimate: 2 hours • Volume required: 71 L • Volume with 10% head space: 80 L • Well mixed reactor • Material: Stainless Steel
Additional Process Considerations • Product sensitive to reactor conditions • Reaction is exothermic and high temperatures can denature insulin • HCl input into reactor and pH extremes can also denature insulin
Control Schemes T set point = 40oC
Cost Estimate • Reactor Suppliers: • Perry Videx • Walker Engineered Products • New Brunswick Scientific • Controller supplier: • Aspen Technology Inc.
Cost of Process • Capital Cost: $ 240,000 • Reactors (3) • Controllers • Operating Cost: $4000/yr • HCl ($72 per ton) • Utilities ($0.06 per kWh)