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Author: Subject: Butyric acid from sucrose
bereal511
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[*] posted on 14-2-2007 at 18:43
Butyric acid from sucrose


For the past month, I've been trying to collect butyric acid as a byproduct of the fermentation of sugar. I first tried to collect the whole collection of bacteria that can ferment sugar to butyric acid by innoculating a chunk of cheese with soil and allowing it to stand until the cheese began to give off the characteristic smell of butyric acid, vomit . I used this technique because I had read on Wiki that in the past, butyric acid was produced "...by the fermentation of sugar or starch, brought about by the addition of putrefying cheese, with calcium carbonate added to neutralize the acids." So then I prepared a gallon of growth solution containing 80 grams of sugar, 6 grams ammonium sulfate, 5 grams of sodium bicarbonate, 1 gram of magnesium sulfate, and 2 grams of sodium chloride, extrapolated from data from this experimental procedure:
http://www.zju.edu.cn/jzus/2005/B0511/B051105.pdf

I then added the putrified cheese and 100 grams of calcium carbonate in excess to neutralize the butyric acid that would form. The container was sealed off with a rubber stopper and a glass U-tube jetting out of the stopper hole to release outlet gases. Each day, I added 20 grams of sugar and 15 grams of calcium carbonate.

Yes, I'm aware that butter can be hydrolyzed to form butyrate salts, but I just wanted to see if this method was a possible way to generate large amounts of butyric acid without buying pounds of butter and sodium hydroxide. Plus it's more fun.

So after the initial 3 or 4 days, the mixture bubbled with the indicative fermentation and neutralization gases. And the smell of butyric acid did indeed grow a bit stronger each day. But after about a week in, the bacteria stopped fermenting and nothing happened for about another week.

Then about 3 days ago, the solution began to bubble vigorously out of random. I currently can't smell anything because I have a heavy cold, so I can't sense if there's any production of butyric acid and I probably won't be able to for about another week.

And so I have two questions. One, is it possible that the butyric acid producing bacteria laid dormant or was dying because of some competing bacteria and now it is beginning to take over, or did some contamination of yeast get in and start to produce ethanol? And two, is there a test solution that can be prepared to determine if the contents of solution is indeed calcium butyrate, or if the new products of the second fermentation is ethanol?

[Edited on 15-2-2007 by bereal511]




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[*] posted on 14-2-2007 at 18:51


I believe there's another thread on this already. But in quick response, the normal route for what you are trying was to ferment the sugar to calcium lactate, then add the cheese to start the fermentation of lactate to butyrate.

One way to see what you have is to take 20 - 50 ml, add a little more CaCO3 to make sure there's no free acid, and distill it. If you get much coming over around the boiling point of the etOH-H2O azeotrope, then you know you've got ethanol fermentation. After distilling half to 2/3 the liquid, cool it and add HCl or H2SO4; you should be able to smell free butyric acid and/or co-distill it with some of the water.
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Sauron
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[*] posted on 14-2-2007 at 19:08


I believe there are enzymes available to convert sugar to butanol, certainly to pentanols (amylases) and getting from butanol to butyric acid is hardly a challenge.

These processes tend so smell to high heaven but you know that.
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bereal511
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[*] posted on 14-2-2007 at 20:07


Hmm, indeed there is another thread on butyric acid. Though only a snippet covers the fermentation process.

http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=6401#p...




As an adolescent I aspired to lasting fame, I craved factual certainty, and I thirsted for a meaningful vision of human life -- so I became a scientist. This is like becoming an archbishop so you can meet girls.
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