We present a new modeling approach for the study and prediction of important process outcomes of biotechnological cultivation processes under the influence of process parameter variations. Our model is based on physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) in combination with kinetic growth equations. Using Taylor series, multivariate external process parameter variations for important variables such as temperature, seeding cell density and feeding rates can be integrated into the corresponding kinetic rates and the governing growth equations. In addition to previous approaches, PINNs also allow continuous and differentiable functions as predictions for the process outcomes. Accordingly, our results show that PINNs in combination with Taylor-series expansions for kinetic growth equations provide a very high prediction accuracy for important process variables such as cell densities and concentrations as well as a detailed study of individual and combined parameter influences. Furthermore, the proposed approach can also be used to evaluate the outcomes of new parameter variations and combinations, which enables a saving of experiments in combination with a model-driven optimization study of the design space.
Keywords: cultivation and upstream processes; external process parameters; modeling; physics‐informed neural networks; upstream.
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