Q.58 Decimal reduction time of bacterial spores is 23 min at 121 °C and the death kinetics follow first order. One liter of medium containing 105 spores per mL was sterilized for 10 min at 121 °C in a batch sterilizer. The number of spores in the medium after sterilization (assuming destruction of spores in heating and cooling period is negligible) will be __________ × 107.

Q.58 Decimal reduction time of bacterial spores is 23 min at 121 °C and the death kinetics follow first
order. One liter of medium containing 105 spores per mL was sterilized for 10 min at 121 °C in a batch
sterilizer. The number of spores in the medium after sterilization (assuming destruction of spores in
heating and cooling period is negligible) will be __________ × 107.

 

The decimal reduction time (D-value) of 23 minutes at 121°C indicates that the bacterial spore population reduces by 90% (one log cycle) every 23 minutes under first-order death kinetics. For 1 liter of medium with an initial 105 spores/mL (total 108 spores), sterilization at 121°C for 10 minutes yields approximately 3.68 × 107 surviving spores, matching the fill-in-the-blank as 3.68 × 107 or rounded to 4 in some contexts, but precisely 3.68.

Problem Breakdown

First-order kinetics follow log(N/N0) = -t/D, where N is final spores, N0 is initial (108 total), t=10 min, D=23 min.

This gives log(N/108) = -10/23 ≈ -0.4348, so N/108 ≈ 10(-0.4348) ≈ 0.3678.

Thus, N ≈ 0.3678 × 108 = 3.678 × 107 spores per liter.

Step-by-Step Calculation

  • Initial load: 105 spores/mL × 1000 mL = 108 spores.
  • Log reduction: t/D = 10/23 ≈ 0.4348 (less than 1, so ~63% survivors expected).
  • Survivors: N = N0 × 10(-t/D) = 108 × 10(-0.4348) = 3.678 × 107.
  • Negligible heating/cooling loss per assumption confirms direct holding time use.

Decimal reduction time of bacterial spores at 121°C is key for batch sterilization in biotech fermentation. This guide solves the exact problem: 1 liter medium with 105 spores per mL sterilized 10 min at 121°C (D=23 min, first-order kinetics), finding survivors as __ ×107. Ideal for GATE BT, biochemical engineering students optimizing medium sterility.

Core Concept: D-Value in Sterilization

Decimal reduction time (D-value) at 121°C measures time for 90% spore kill under first-order kinetics: log(N/N0) = -t/D.

For bacterial spores (e.g., Bacillus), D121=23 min means slow death, requiring t > 23 min for full log reduction.

Here, short 10-min hold gives partial kill (0.43 logs).

Detailed Solution Walkthrough

  • Initial spores: 105/mL × 1000 = 108 total.
  • Log survivors ratio: -10/23 = -0.4348.
  • N = 108 × antilog(-0.4348) = 108 × 0.3678 = 3.678 × 107.
  • Answer: 3.68 (or 3.7 rounded) ×107, fitting “__________ ×107” blank.

Common Errors Explained

  • Mistake 1: Using total volume wrong (e.g., forget ×1000 mL/L) → underestimates N0.
  • Mistake 2: Wrong kinetics (zero-order) → linear decay, not exponential.
  • Mistake 3: Include heating/cooling → but negligible per question.
  • Overkill assumption: 10 min << 23D (for 105→1 needs ~115 min).

Biotech Applications

In fermenters, this ensures <10-3 contamination probability via Del factor (t/D × viability).

Scale-up uses F0 = ∫10(T-121)/10 dt for variable heat.

Practice for exams: Verify with Python: import math; N=1e8*math.pow(10,-10/23) → 3.68e7.

 

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