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1.
Performance of two dual chambered mediator-less microbial fuel cells (MFCs) was evaluated at different sludge loading rate (SLR) and feed pH. Optimum performance in terms of organic matter removal and power production was obtained at the SLR of 0.75 kg COD kg VSS−1 d−1. Maximum power density of 158 mW/m2 and 600 mW/m2 was obtained in MFC-1 (feed pH 6.0) and MFC-2 (feed pH 8.0), respectively. Internal resistance of the cell decreased with increase in SLR. When operated only with biofilm on anode, the maximum power density was 109.5 mW/m2 in MFC-1 and 459 mW/m2 in MFC-2, which was, respectively, 30% and 23.5% less than the value obtained in MFC-1 and MFC-2 at SLR of 0.75 kg COD kg VSS−1 d−1. Maximum volumetric power of 15.51 W/m3 and 36.72 W/m3 was obtained in MFC-1 and MFC-2, respectively, when permanganate was added as catholyte. Higher feed pH (8.0) favoured higher power production.  相似文献   

2.
Microalgae Spirulina platensis were attached to the anode of a membrane-free and mediator-free microbial fuel cell (MFC) to produce electricity through the consumption of biochemical compounds inside the microalgae. An increase in open circuit voltage (OCV) was observed with decreasing light intensity and optimal biomass area density. The highest OCV observation for the MFC was 0.39 V in the dark with a biomass area density on the anode surface of 1.2 g cm−2. Additionally, it was observed that the MFC with 0.75 g cm−2 of biomass area density produced 1.64 mW m−2 of electrical power in the dark, which is superior to the 0.132 mW m−2 produced in the light. Which also means the MFC can be applied to generate electrical power under both day and night conditions.  相似文献   

3.
Bio (microbial) fuel cell (microbial fuel cell) with Saccharomyces cerevisiae as anodic biocatalyst was evaluated in terms of power generation and substrate degradation at three redox conditions (5.0, 6.0 and 7.0). Fuel cell was operated in single chamber (open-air cathode) configuration without mediators using non-catalyzed graphite as electrodes. The performance was further studied with increasing loading rate (OLRI, 0.91 kg COD/m3-day; OLRII, 1.43 kg COD/m3). Higher current density was observed at pH 6.0 [160.36 mA/m2 (OLRI); 282.83 mA/m2 (OLRII)] than pH 5.0 (137.24 mA/m2) and pH 7.0 (129.25 mA/m2). Bio-electrochemical behavior of fuel cell was evaluated using cyclic voltammetry which showed the presence of redox mediators (NADH/NAD+; FADH/FAD+). Higher electron discharge was observed at pH 6.0, suggesting higher proton shuttling through the involvement of different redox mediators. The application of yeast based fuel cell can be extended to treat high strength wastewaters with simultaneous power generation.  相似文献   

4.
Cellulose has been used in two-chamber microbial fuel cells (MFCs), but power densities were low. Higher power densities can be achieved in air-cathode MFCs using an inoculum from a two-chamber, aqueous-cathode microbial electrolysis cell (MEC). Air-cathode MFCs with this inoculum produced maximum power densities of 1070 mW m−2 (cathode surface area) in single-chamber and 880 mW m−2 in two-chamber MFCs. Coulombic efficiencies ranged from 25% to 50%, and COD removals were 50-70% based on total cellulose removals of 60-80%. Decreasing the reactor volume from 26 to 14 mL (while maintaining constant electrode spacing) decreased power output by 66% (from 526 to 180 mW m−2) due to a reduction in total mass of cellulose added. These results demonstrate that air-cathode MFCs can produce high power densities with cellulose following proper acclimation of the inoculum, and that organic loading rates are important for maximizing power densities from particulate substrates.  相似文献   

5.
This study examines the effects of biofouling on the electrochemical properties of cation exchange membranes (CEMs), such as membrane electrical resistance (MER), specific proton conductivity (SC), and ion transport number (t+), in addition to on microbial fuel cell (MFC) performance. CEM biofouling using a 15.5 ± 4.6 μm biofilm was found to slightly increase the MER from 15.65 Ω cm2 (fresh Nafion) to 19.1 Ω cm2, whereas an increase of almost two times was achieved when the electrolyte was changed from deionized water to an anolyte containing a high cation concentration supporting bacterial growth. The simple physical cleaning of CEMs had little effect on the Coulombic efficiency (CE), whereas replacing a biofouled CEM with new one resulted in considerable increase of up to 59.3%, compared to 45.1% for a biofouled membrane. These results clearly suggest the internal resistance increase of MFC was mainly caused by the sulfonate functional groups of CEM being occupied with cations contained in the anolyte, rather than biofouling itself.  相似文献   

6.
The performance of the cathodic electron acceptors (CEA) used in the two-chambered microbial fuel cell (MFC) was in the following order: potassium permanganate (1.11 V; 116.2 mW/m2) > potassium persulfate (1.10 V; 101.7 mW/m2) > potassium dichromate, K2Cr2O7 (0.76 V; 45.9 mW/m2) > potassium ferricyanide (0.78 V; 40.6 mW/m2). Different operational parameters were considered to find out the performance of the MFC like initial pH in aqueous solutions, concentrations of the electron acceptors, phosphate buffer and aeration. Potassium persulfate was found to be more suitable out of the four electron acceptors which had a higher open circuit potential (OCP) but sustained the voltage for a much longer period than permanganate. Chemical oxygen demand (COD) reduction of 59% was achieved using 10 mM persulfate in a batch process. RALEX™ AEM-PES, an anion exchange membrane (AEM), performed better in terms of power density and OCP in comparison to Nafion®117 Cation Exchange Membrane (CEM).  相似文献   

7.
Electricity production and modeling of microbial fuel cell (MFC) from continuous beer brewery wastewater was studied in this paper. A single air-cathode MFC was constructed, carbon fiber was used as anode and diluted brewery wastewater (COD = 626.58 mg/L) as substrate. The MFC displayed an open-circuit voltage of 0.578 V and a maximum power density of 9.52 W/m3 (264 mW/m2). Using the model based on polarization curve, various voltage losses were quantified. At current density of 1.79 A/m2, reaction kinetic loss and mass transport loss both achieved to 0.248 V; while ohmic loss was 0.046 V. Results demonstrated that it was feasible and stable for producing bioelectricity from brewery wastewater; while the most important factors which influenced the performance of the MFC are reaction kinetic loss and mass transport loss.  相似文献   

8.
External resistance affects the performance of microbial fuel cells (MFCs) by controlling the flow of electrons from the anode to the cathode. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of external resistance on bacterial diversity and metabolism in MFCs. Four external resistances (20, 249, 480, and 1000 Ω) were tested by operating parallel MFCs independently at constant circuit loads for 10 weeks. A maximum power density of 66 mW m−2 was achieved by the 20 Ω MFCs, while the MFCs with 249, 480, and 1000 Ω external resistances produced 57.5, 27, and 47 mW m−2, respectively. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis analysis of partial 16S rRNA genes showed clear differences between the planktonic and anode-attached populations at various external resistances. Concentrations of short chain fatty acids were higher in MFCs with larger circuit loads, suggesting that fermentative metabolism dominated over anaerobic respiration using the anode as the final electron acceptor.  相似文献   

9.
This study evaluated how different types of industrial wastewaters (bakery, brewery, paper and dairy) affect the performance of identical microbial fuel cells (MFCs); and the microbial composition and electrochemistry of MFC anodes. MFCs fed with paper wastewater produced the highest current density (125 ± 2 mA/m2) at least five times higher than dairy (25 ± 1 mA/m2), brewery and bakery wastewaters (10 ± 1 mA/m2). Such high current production was independent of substrate degradability. A comprehensive study was conducted to determine the factor driving current production when using the paper effluent. The microbial composition of anodic biofilms differed according to the type of wastewater used, and only MFC anodes fed with paper wastewater showed redox activity at −134 ± 5 mV vs NHE. Electrochemical analysis of this redox activity indicated that anodic bacteria produced a putative electron shuttling compound that increased the electron transfer rate through diffusion, and as a result the overall MFC performance.  相似文献   

10.
The Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple can play a significant role in the abiotic reduction of 2-nitrophenol (2-NP) at the cathode chamber of a microbial fuel cell (MFC). Experimental results demonstrate that Fe(II) addition to the cathode chamber contributes to a significant increase in the reaction rate of 2-NP removal and the power performance of MFC. Observed pseudo first-order rate constants and power densities are heavily dependent on the identity of the Fe(II)-complexing ligands. The Fe(II) complex coordinated with citrate results in the highest rate constant up to 0.12 h−1 as compared to other organically complexed iron species including Fe(II)-EDTA, Fe(II)-acetate and Fe(II)-oxalate, and iron species uncomplexed with any organic ligands. In addition, the presence of Fe(II)-citrate species leads to a maximum volumetric power density of 1.0 W m−3, which is the highest value among those obtained with other iron species for the similar MFC system.  相似文献   

11.
Yuan Y  Zhao B  Zhou S  Zhong S  Zhuang L 《Bioresource technology》2011,102(13):6887-6891
This study investigates the effects of anodic pH on electricity generation in microbial fuel cells (MFCs) and the intrinsic reasons behind them. In a two-chamber MFC, the maximum power density is 1170 ± 58 mW m−2 at pH 9.0, which is 29% and 89% higher than those working at pH 7.0 and 5.0, respectively. Electrochemical measurements reveal that pH affects the electron transfer kinetics of anodic biofilms. The apparent electron transfer rate constant (kapp) and exchange current density (i0) are greater whereas the charge transfer resistance (Rct) is smaller at pH 9.0 than at other conditions. Scanning electron microscopy verifies that alkaline conditions benefit biofilm formation in MFCs. These results demonstrate that electrochemical interactions between bacteria and electrodes in MFCs are greatly enhanced under alkaline conditions, which can be one of the important reasons for the improved MFC output.  相似文献   

12.
Wang A  Sun D  Cao G  Wang H  Ren N  Wu WM  Logan BE 《Bioresource technology》2011,102(5):4137-4143
Hydrogen gas production from cellulose was investigated using an integrated hydrogen production process consisting of a dark fermentation reactor and microbial fuel cells (MFCs) as power sources for a microbial electrolysis cell (MEC). Two MFCs (each 25 mL) connected in series to an MEC (72 mL) produced a maximum of 0.43 V using fermentation effluent as a feed, achieving a hydrogen production rate from the MEC of 0.48 m3 H2/m3/d (based on the MEC volume), and a yield of 33.2 mmol H2/g COD removed in the MEC. The overall hydrogen production for the integrated system (fermentation, MFC and MEC) was increased by 41% compared with fermentation alone to 14.3 mmol H2/g cellulose, with a total hydrogen production rate of 0.24 m3 H2/m3/d and an overall energy recovery efficiency of 23% (based on cellulose removed) without the need for any external electrical energy input.  相似文献   

13.
Carbon cloth anodes were modified with 4(N,N-dimethylamino)benzene diazonium tetrafluoroborate to increase nitrogen-containing functional groups at the anode surface in order to test whether the performance of microbial fuel cells (MFCs) could be improved by controllably modifying the anode surface chemistry. Anodes with the lowest extent of functionalization, based on a nitrogen/carbon ratio of 0.7 as measured by XPS, achieved the highest power density of 938 mW/m2. This power density was 24% greater than an untreated anode, and similar to that obtained with an ammonia gas treatment previously shown to increase power. Increasing the nitrogen/carbon ratio to 3.8, however, decreased the power density to 707 mW/m2. These results demonstrate that a small amount of nitrogen functionalization on the carbon cloth material is sufficient to enhance MFC performance, likely as a result of promoting bacterial adhesion to the surface without adversely affecting microbial viability or electron transfer to the surface.  相似文献   

14.
Oxygen transfer capacity and removal of ammonium and organic matter were investigated in this study to evaluate the performance of a lab-scale tidal flow constructed wetland. Average oxygen supply under tidal operation (350 g m−2 d−1) was much higher than in conventional constructed wetlands (<100 g m−2 d−1), resulting in enhanced removal of BOD5 and NH4+. Theoretical oxygen demand from BOD5 removal and nitrification was approximately matched by the measured oxygen supply, which indicated aerobic consumption of BOD5 and NH4+ under tidal operation. When BOD5 removal increased from 148 g m−2 d−1 to 294 g m−2 d−1, neither exhausted oxygen from the aggregate matrix during feeding period (111 g m−2 d−1) nor effluent dissolved oxygen (DO) concentration (2.8 mg/L) changed significantly, demonstrating that the oxygen transfer potential of the treatment system had not been exceeded. However, even though DO had not been exhausted, inhibition of nitrification was observed under high BOD loading. The loss of nitrification was attributed to excessive heterotrophic biofilm growth believed to induce oxygen transfer limitations or oxygen competition in thickened biofilms.  相似文献   

15.
How do macrophyte distribution patterns affect hydraulic resistances?   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In eutrophic river systems, macrophytes attain high biomass with reduced drainage and increased flooding risk. To avoid these problems, water managers remove vegetation. Total removal, however, increases wash out of macro-invertebrate communities reducing the ecological value of rivers. Partial vegetation removal reduces this washout and prevents an increase in hydraulic resistance. In this, study the hydraulic performance of three partial vegetation removal patterns was tested. From the results it was seen that hydraulic resistance, expressed as Manning's n, was varying between 0.025 m−1/3 s and 0.050 m−1/3 s. Compared with the empty situation, the different distribution patterns increased resistance between 14 and 23%. Hydraulic resistance of these patterns was also significantly influenced by the species present in the vegetation patches. Three groups of macrophyte plants (emerged, floating leaved and submerged) with significantly different hydraulic resistances were determined. The emerged species Sparganium erectum generated the least resistance with an average friction of 0.03 m−1/3 s. Stuckenia pectinata and Potamogeton natans had slightly higher friction values around 0.4 m−1/3 s. Ranunculus penicillatus and Callitriche platycarpa had average friction values around 0.05 m−1/3 s.The proposed vegetation removal patterns are good alternatives to create a management system, which minimally increases hydraulic resistance but still guarantees the ecological functions.  相似文献   

16.
A microfluidic microbial fuel cell fabricated by soft lithography   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Qian F  He Z  Thelen MP  Li Y 《Bioresource technology》2011,102(10):5836-5840
Here we report a new microfluidic microbial fuel cell (MFC) platform built by soft-lithography techniques. The MFC design includes a unique sub-5 μL polydimethylsiloxane soft chamber featuring carbon cloth electrodes and microfluidic delivery of electrolytes. Bioelectricity was generated using Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 cultivated on either complex organic substrates or lactate-based minimal medium. These micro-MFCs exhibited fast start-ups, reproducible current generation, and enhanced power densities up to 62.5 W m−3 that represents the best result for sub-100 μL MFCs. Systematic comparisons of custom-made MFC reactors having different chamber sizes indicate volumetric power density is inversely correlated with chamber size in our systems: i.e., the smaller the chamber, the higher the power density is achieved.  相似文献   

17.
In this work, it has been studied the production of electricity and the oxidation of the pollutants contained in a synthetic wastewater fed with glucose and peptone of soybean as carbon sources, using a mediator-less microbial fuel cell (MFC). Special attention has been paid to the acclimation stage, in which it was found that with high hydraulic and solid retention times it is possible to obtain a very efficient process with a 90% COD removal and practically total conversion of COD into electricity (considering the typical stoichiometric yield of heterotrophic biomass). The influence of concentration sludge was studied working with three different amounts of suspended solids, from 120 to 14000 mg. The maximum power density increased exponentially with the concentration sludge from 2.1 mW m−2 to 11 mW m−2 at the highest concentration sludge. More over, the percentage of the influent COD used to produce electricity was higher than 100% when the highest sludge concentration was used. This was explained taking into account the endogenous metabolism of micro-organisms presented in the system.  相似文献   

18.
Surface modifications of anode materials are important for enhancing power generation of microbial fuel cell (MFC). Membrane free single-chamber air-cathode MFCs, MFC-A and MFC-N, were constructed using activated carbon fiber felt (ACF) anodes treated by nitric acid and ethylenediamine (EDA), respectively. Experimental results showed that the start-up time to achieve the maximum voltages for the MFC-A and MFC-N was shortened by 45% and 51%, respectively as compared to that for MFC-AT equipped with an unmodified anode. Moreover, the power output of MFCs with modified anodes was significantly improved. In comparison with MFC-AT which had a maximum power density of 1304 mW/m2, the MFC-N achieved a maximum power density of 1641 mW/m2. The nitric acid-treated anode in MFC-A increased the power density by 58% reaching 2066 mW/m2. XPS analysis of the treated and untreated anode materials indicated that the power enhancement was attributable to the changes of surface functional groups.  相似文献   

19.
Microbial desalination cells (MDCs) hold great promise for drinking water production because of potential energy savings during the desalination process. In this study, we developed a continuously operated MDC - upflow microbial desalination cell (UMDC) for the purpose of salt removal. During the 4-month operation, the UMDC constantly removed salts and generated bio-electricity. At a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 4 days (salt solution) and current production of ∼62 mA, the UMDC was able to remove more than 99% of NaCl from the salt solution that had an initial salt concentration of 30 g total dissolved solids (TDS)/L. In addition, the TDS removal rate was 7.50 g TDS L−1 d−1 (salt solution volume) or 5.25 g TDS L−1 d−1 (wastewater volume), and the desalinated water met the drinking water standard, in terms of TDS concentration. A high charge transfer efficiency of 98.6% or 81% was achieved at HRT 1 or 4 d. The UMDC produced a maximum power density of 30.8 W/m3. The phenomena of bipolar electrodialysis and proton transport in the UMDC were discussed. These results demonstrated the potential of the UMDC as either a sole desalination process or a pre-desalination reactor for downstream desalination processes.  相似文献   

20.
Production of electricity from samples obtained during anaerobic digestion of grass silage was examined using single-chamber air-cathode mediator-less microbial fuel cells (MFCs). The samples were obtained from anaerobic reactors at start-up conditions after 3 and 10 days of operation under psychrophilic (15 °C) and mesophilic (37 °C) temperatures. Electricity was directly produced from all samples at a concentration of 1500 mg COD L−1. Power density obtained from the samples, as a sole carbon source, ranged from 56 ± 3 W m−3 to 31 ± 1 W m−3 for the mesophilic and psychrophilic samples, respectively. Coulombic efficiencies ranged from 18 ± 1% to 12 ± 1% for the same samples. The relationship between the maximum voltage output and initial COD concentration appeared to follow saturation kinetics at the external resistance of 217 Ω. Chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal was over 90% and total phenolics removal was in the range of 30-75% for all samples tested, with a standard amount of 60 mg L−1 total phenolics removed for every sample. Our results indicate that generating electricity from solution samples of anaerobic reactors utilizing grass silage is possible, opening the possibility for combination of anaerobic digestion with MFC technology for energy generation.  相似文献   

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