Team:Alberta/HumanPractices/Bioreactor

From 2011.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
Line 28: Line 28:
<p> In the first stage of design, the processes that are required to be carried out with our bioreactor were determined. Through completing a process-flow map, we were able to determine the required order of various processes, their relation to one another, and the required inputs and resultant outputs of each. This allowed our team to visually see progression of the synthesis of our biodiesel. </p>
<p> In the first stage of design, the processes that are required to be carried out with our bioreactor were determined. Through completing a process-flow map, we were able to determine the required order of various processes, their relation to one another, and the required inputs and resultant outputs of each. This allowed our team to visually see progression of the synthesis of our biodiesel. </p>
-
<br>
 
         <center>
         <center>
-
         <img src=https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/6/6c/Alberta-Bioreactor_Design_Phase_1.png width=580px>
+
         <img src=https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/6/6c/Alberta-Bioreactor_Design_Phase_1.png width=520px>
         </center>
         </center>
<center> Process-flow mapping of biodiesel synthesis </center>
<center> Process-flow mapping of biodiesel synthesis </center>

Revision as of 06:20, 28 September 2011

HUMAN PRACTICES

Bioreactor Design

At the outset of our project, Team Alberta possessed a vision of communities having the ability to utilize our created fuel for various applications. To make this vision a reality, our team focused much of its efforts on the design of a bioreactor, a self-contained apparatus that would be able to carry out all the processes needed for our fuel’s production. Our bioreactor concept is based on a modular, compact, efficient and safe device, which allows individuals and communities to produce a supply of their own biodiesel using garden wastes, such as grass clippings, as the inputs for production.


The design process allows one to proceed from the abstract to the qualitative; by nature, it is greatly an iterative processes. As alluded to by Suh et al. (2005), at each step in the design process, new information is generated and it is necessary to evaluate the results in terms of the preceding step. Team Alberta applied these insights and carried out several phases of design that progressively allowed us to engineer a functional apparatus.


In the first stage of design, the processes that are required to be carried out with our bioreactor were determined. Through completing a process-flow map, we were able to determine the required order of various processes, their relation to one another, and the required inputs and resultant outputs of each. This allowed our team to visually see progression of the synthesis of our biodiesel.

Process-flow mapping of biodiesel synthesis


I like chicken! I like liver! Meow mix, meow mix, please deliver!

I like chicken! I like liver! Meow mix, meow mix, please deliver!

I like chicken! I like liver! Meow mix, meow mix, please deliver!