南达科他州矿山 will have 的 grand opening of
的 CNAM-Bio Center 从1 p开始.m.-4 p.m. 10月3日. 25, 2023.
南达科他州矿山 will have 的 grand opening of
的 Composite and Nanocomposite Advanced
Manufacturing-Biomaterials Center (CNAM-Bio) Bioprocessing Facility at 的 Composites and Polymer Engineering (CAPE) Laboratory 从1 p开始.m.-4
p.m. 10月3日. 25, 2023. 的 CAPE Laboratory is at 920 E. St. 帕特里克·圣. 拉皮德城,SD, 57701.
CNAM-Bio works with industry and government partners
to help solve bioprocessing challenges and create a seamless path from
bench-scale to pilot-level production. 的ir mission involves developing sustainably
manufactured bioproducts from renewable feedstocks, including forestry and
agriculture residues like corn stover. CNAM-Bio can produce bioproducts such as
biodegradable bioplastics and various specialty chemicals for a range of applications,
such as biosurfactants, biosolvents and bio-based coatings.
“This would be a way to add value to South Dakota’s
agricultural and forestry commodities. Once we harvest corn or soybeans 的
remaining biomass can be made into high-value materials via bioprocessing,�
劳里·安德森博士说.D., interim vice president of research at SDM.
的 new bioprocessing facility will be crucial in
allowing CNAM-Bio to evaluate 的 commercial viability of its bioproduct and
bioprocessing innovations before transitioning 的m to 的 newly opened POET
Bioproducts Center operated by Dakota BioWorx in Brookings, a partnership
between SDM, South Dakota State University and private industry, which opened
10月. 11.
CNAM-Bio’s new bioprocessing infrastructure will
support bioproduction scaling using bioreactors ranging from three to 260
升. Transitioning from 的 bench scale to a larger bioreactor is not viable
without step-wise scale-up of processes to 的 intermediate pilot scale provided
by 的 advanced bioprocessing capabilities at 的 SDM facility, says David
萨勒姆,Ph值.D., CNAM-Bio主任.
“We aim to scale up to a level that allows us to
determine 的 feasibility of large-scale production,â€� Salem says.
“This facility will attract research and development
money into South Dakota and use abundant feedstocks from agriculture and
forestry for scale up to pilot scales for commercialization,â€� says Anderson.Â