A microbial fuel cell (MFC) uses microorganisms to facilitate the conversion of chemical energy to electrical energy. MFCs contain two chambers separated by a membrane - an anode chamber where oxidation occurs and a cathode chamber where reduction occurs. Electrons produced during oxidation are transferred to an electrode or mediator and then to the cathode. Ions move through the membrane to maintain charge balance. MFCs can use various organic materials and electron acceptors and have applications in power generation, wastewater treatment, and harvesting energy from sediments and soils.
A microbial fuel cell (MFC) uses microorganisms to facilitate the conversion of chemical energy to electrical energy. MFCs contain two chambers separated by a membrane - an anode chamber where oxidation occurs and a cathode chamber where reduction occurs. Electrons produced during oxidation are transferred to an electrode or mediator and then to the cathode. Ions move through the membrane to maintain charge balance. MFCs can use various organic materials and electron acceptors and have applications in power generation, wastewater treatment, and harvesting energy from sediments and soils.
A microbial fuel cell (MFC) uses microorganisms to facilitate the conversion of chemical energy to electrical energy. MFCs contain two chambers separated by a membrane - an anode chamber where oxidation occurs and a cathode chamber where reduction occurs. Electrons produced during oxidation are transferred to an electrode or mediator and then to the cathode. Ions move through the membrane to maintain charge balance. MFCs can use various organic materials and electron acceptors and have applications in power generation, wastewater treatment, and harvesting energy from sediments and soils.
A microbial fuel cell (MFC) uses microorganisms to facilitate the conversion of chemical energy to electrical energy. MFCs contain two chambers separated by a membrane - an anode chamber where oxidation occurs and a cathode chamber where reduction occurs. Electrons produced during oxidation are transferred to an electrode or mediator and then to the cathode. Ions move through the membrane to maintain charge balance. MFCs can use various organic materials and electron acceptors and have applications in power generation, wastewater treatment, and harvesting energy from sediments and soils.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 5
MUDWATT
A microbial fuel cell (MFC) is a device that converts chemical
energy to electrical energy by the action of microorganisms. These electrochemical cells are constructed using either a bioanode and/or a biocathode. Most MFCs contain a membrane to separate the compartments of the anode (where oxidation takes place) and the cathode (where reduction takes place). The electrons produced during oxidation are transferred directly to an electrode or to a redox mediator species. The electron flux is moved to the cathode. The charge balance of the system is maintained by ionic movement inside the cell, usually across an ionic membrane. Most MFCs use an organic electron donor that is oxidized to produce CO2, protons, and electrons. Other electron donors have been reported, such as sulfur compounds or hydrogen. The cathode reaction uses a variety of electron acceptors, most often oxygen (O2). Other electron acceptors studied include metal recovery by reduction, water to hydrogen, nitrate reduction, and sulfate reduction. MFCs are attractive for power generation applications that require only low power, but where replacing batteries may be impractical, such as wireless sensor networks.[16][17][18] Wireless sensors, powered by microbial fuel cells can then for example be used for remote monitoring (conservation).[19] Virtually any organic material could be used to feed the fuel cell, including coupling cells to wastewater treatment plants. Chemical process wastewater[20][21] and synthetic wastewater[22] [23] have been used to produce bioelectricity in dual- and single- chamber mediatorless MFCs (uncoated graphite electrodes). MFCs are attractive for power generation applications that require only low power, but where replacing batteries may be impractical, such as wireless sensor networks. Wireless sensors, powered by microbial fuel cells can then for example be used for remote monitoring (conservation). Virtually any organic material could be used to feed the fuel cell, including coupling cells to wastewater treatment plants. Chemical process wastewater and synthetic wastewater have been used to produce bioelectricity in dual- and single-chamber mediatorless MFCs (uncoated graphite electrodes). MFCs are used in water treatment to harvest energy utilizing anaerobic digestion. The process can also reduce pathogens. However, it requires temperatures upwards of 30 degrees C and requires an extra step in order to convert biogas to electricity. Spiral spacers may be used to increase electricity generation by creating a helical flow in the MFC. Scaling MFCs is a challenge because of the power output challenges of a larger surface area. soil-based microbial fuel cells adhere to the basic MFC principles, whereby soil acts as the nutrient-rich anodic media, the inoculum and the proton exchange membrane (PEM). The anode is placed at a particular depth within the soil, while the cathode rests on top the soil and is exposed to air. Soils naturally teem with diverse microbes, including electrogenic bacteria needed for MFCs, and are full of complex sugars and other nutrients that have accumulated from plant and animal material decay. Moreover, the aerobic (oxygen consuming) microbes present in the soil act as an oxygen filter, much like the expensive PEM materials used in laboratory MFC systems, which cause the redox potential of the soil to decrease with greater depth. Soil-based MFCs are becoming popular educational tools for science classrooms. Sediment microbial fuel cells (SMFCs) have been applied for wastewater treatment. Simple SMFCs can generate energy while decontaminating wastewater. Most such SMFCs contain plants to mimic constructed wetlands. By 2015 SMFC tests had reached more than 150. In 2015 researchers announced an SMFC application that extracts energy and charges a battery. Salts dissociate into positively and negatively charged ions in water and move and adhere to the respective negative and positive electrodes, charging the battery and making it possible to remove the salt effecting microbial capacitive desalination. The microbes produce more energy than is required for the desalination process. Generation process When microorganisms consume a substance such as sugar in aerobic conditions, they produce carbon dioxide and water. However, when oxygen is not present, they produce carbon dioxide, hydrons (hydrogen ions), and electrons, as described below: C12H22O11 + 13H2O → (Eqt
12CO2 + 48H+ + 48e− . 1) Microbial fuel cells use inorganic mediators to tap into the electron transport chain of cells and channel electrons produced. The mediator crosses the outer cell lipid membranes and bacterial outer membrane; then, it begins to liberate electrons from the electron transport chain that normally would be taken up by oxygen or other intermediates. The now-reduced mediator exits the cell laden with electrons that it transfers to an electrode; this electrode becomes the anode. The release of the electrons recycles the mediator to its original oxidized state, ready to repeat the process. This can happen only under anaerobic conditions; if oxygen is present, it will collect the electrons, as it has greater electronegativity. In MFC operation, the anode is the terminal electron acceptor recognized by bacteria in the anodic chamber. Therefore, the microbial activity is strongly dependent on the anode's redox potential. A Michaelis–Menten curve was obtained between the anodic potential and the power output of an acetate-driven MFC. A critical anodic potential seems to provide maximum power output. Potential mediators include natural red, methylene blue, thionine, and resorufin. Organisms capable of producing an electric current are termed exoelectrogens. In order to turn this current into usable electricity, exoelectrogens have to be accommodated in a fuel cell. The mediator and a micro-organism such as yeast, are mixed together in a solution to which is added a substrate such as glucose. This mixture is placed in a sealed chamber to stop oxygen entering, thus forcing the micro-organism to undertake anaerobic respiration. An electrode is placed in the solution to act as the anode. In the second chamber of the MFC is another solution and the positively charged cathode. It is the equivalent of the oxygen sink at the end of the electron transport chain, external to the biological cell. The solution is an oxidizing agent that picks up the electrons at the cathode. As with the electron chain in the yeast cell, this could be a variety of molecules such as oxygen, although a more convenient option is a solid oxidizing agent, which requires less volume. O2 [2] or the solid oxidizing agent provides most of the chemical energy powering the cell. Connecting the two electrodes is a wire (or other electrically conductive path). Completing the circuit and connecting the two chambers is a salt bridge or ion-exchange membrane. This last feature allows the protons produced, as described in Eqt. 1, to pass from the anode chamber to the cathode chamber. The reduced mediator carries electrons from the cell to the electrode. Here the mediator is oxidized as it deposits the electrons. These then flow across the wire to the second electrode, which acts as an electron sink. From here they pass to an oxidizing material. Also the hydrogen ions/protons are moved from the anode to the cathode via a proton exchange membrane such as Nafion. They will move across to the lower concentration gradient and be combined with the oxygen but to do this they need an electron. This generates current and the hydrogen is used sustaining the concentration gradient. Algal biomass has been observed to give high energy when used as substrates in microbial fuel cell.