Síntesis Industrial de Vitamina C (Ácido Ascórbico)
Embed This Widget
Add the script tag and a data attribute to embed this widget.
Embed via iframe for maximum compatibility.
<iframe src="https://chemfyi.com/iframe/entity//" width="420" height="400" frameborder="0" style="border:0;border-radius:10px;max-width:100%" loading="lazy"></iframe>
Paste this URL in WordPress, Medium, or any oEmbed-compatible platform.
https://chemfyi.com/entity//
Add a dynamic SVG badge to your README or docs.
[](https://chemfyi.com/entity//)
Use the native HTML custom element.
De la glucosa a la vitamina más consumida en el mundo
Descripción general
Vitamin C (L-ascorbic acid) is manufactured through the Reichstein process or its modern two-step fermentation variant, converting D-glucose into L-ascorbic acid via D-sorbitol. China produces over 80% of the world's supply. The original Reichstein process (1934) involves one fermentation step and multiple chemical steps, while the modern two-fermentation process replaces several chemical steps with a second microbial conversion, reducing waste and cost. Vitamin C is used as a food additive (antioxidant E300), dietary supplement, and pharmaceutical excipient.
Proceso químico
D-Glucose is catalytically hydrogenated to D-sorbitol using Raney nickel. D-Sorbitol is fermented by Gluconobacter oxydans to L-sorbose. In the Reichstein process, L-sorbose is converted to 2-keto-L-gulonic acid (2-KGA) via diacetone-sorbose protection and oxidation. In the modern process, a second fermentation with Ketogulonicigenium vulgare converts L-sorbose to 2-KGA directly. 2-KGA is lactonized with HCl to yield L-ascorbic acid.
D-Sorbitol →[G. oxydans] L-Sorbose
L-Sorbose →[K. vulgare] 2-Keto-L-gulonic acid
2-KGA →[HCl, heat] L-Ascorbic acid + H₂O
Materias primas
-
D-Glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆) — Corn starch hydrolysis (Starting material)
-
Hydrogen gas (H₂) — Steam methane reforming (Reducing agent (for sorbitol))
-
Gluconobacter oxydans — Culture collection (Fermentation organism (step 1))
Productos finales
-
L-Ascorbic acid (C₆H₈O₆) — Vitamin supplement, food antioxidant (E300), pharmaceutical (USP/EP/FCC grade, >99% purity)
Environmental Impact
The Reichstein process uses acetone for protection steps, generating significant organic solvent waste. The two-fermentation route reduces chemical waste by approximately 40%. Raney nickel catalyst requires careful handling and regeneration. Chinese production dominance has raised concerns about environmental standards in manufacturing.
Consideraciones de seguridad
- ⚠ Raney nickel is pyrophoric when dry
- ⚠ Hydrogen gas is extremely flammable
- ⚠ Concentrated HCl is corrosive
- ⚠ Acetone is flammable and volatile (Reichstein process)
Innovaciones recientes
One-step fermentation processes using engineered microorganisms to convert glucose directly to 2-KGA or ascorbic acid are in development.
Electrochemical oxidation methods offer an alternative to biological oxidation steps with better controllability.
Escala de producción
200000
toneladas/año
$1.2 billion
valor de mercado
Más en Food Processing & Preservation
Fermentación de Etanol para Uso en Bebidas e Industria
Global Industrial Scale
Producción de Ácido Cítrico por Fermentación con Aspergillus niger
Global Industrial Scale
Producción de Ácido Fosfórico Grado Alimenticio
Global Industrial Scale
Producción de Ácido Láctico para la Conservación de Alimentos
Global Industrial Scale
Producción de Glutamato Monosódico (GMS) por Fermentación
Global Industrial Scale
Producción Enzimática de Jarabe de Maíz de Alta Fructosa (JMAF)
Global Industrial Scale
Refinamiento y Cristalización del Azúcar
Global Industrial Scale