Terracotta Membrane-based Microbial Fuel Cell with Algal Biocathode: A Low-Cost Alternative to Dairy Wastewater Treatment Coupled Electricity and Biomass Production

Author(s):  
Smriti Mehrotra ◽  
V. Kiran Kumar ◽  
K. Man Mohan ◽  
S. Gajalakshmi ◽  
Bhawana Pathak
2013 ◽  
Vol 146 ◽  
pp. 247-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramin Sedaqatvand ◽  
Mohsen Nasr Esfahany ◽  
Tayebeh Behzad ◽  
Madjid Mohseni ◽  
Mohammad Mahdi Mardanpour

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iwona Gajda ◽  
Buddhi Arjuna Mendis ◽  
John Greenman ◽  
Ioannis Ieropoulos

<p>A microbial fuel cell (MFC) is a renewable energy converter, which transforms organic biomass directly into electricity, using biofilm-electrode metabolic interaction within a bioelectrochemical cell. Efficiency of this transformation can be enhanced through miniaturisation. Miniaturisation of MFCs offers higher surface-area-to-volume ratio and improved mass transfer.</p> <p>The development of mL-scale; power dense and low cost MFCs, are of great interest in diverse areas of research, ranging from modern bio-robotics, internet-of-things devices, electrical energy generation, remote sensing to wastewater treatment and mineral recovery. The biofilms increased ability in converting organic pollutants into electric power more efficiently, makes mL-sized MFCs attractive for the development of multi-modular stacks and usable off-grid power sources with an ability of enhanced wastewater treatment. This work focuses on small scale MFCs; i) minimising the distance between feeding stream and the biofilm, ii) construction and analysis of a  millilitre scale prototype, using a low cost ceramic separator for higher energy recovery efficiency and sensitivity enhancement to substrates and pollutants. The study aims to test efficient cathode modifications, using graphene ink and magnetite (Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>); in order to improve the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). This in turn is envisioned in an increase of the output, reaching comparable power levels to the larger MFC prototypes tested so far. The additives are chosen such that,  both graphene and iron–based oxides are known from the literature to be catalysts for electrochemical processes, this work focusses on their incorporation into the open-to air cathode in novel, low cost MFC bioreactors.</p> <p>The miniaturised MFC construction constituted of an in-house fabricated small scale ceramic cylinder of internal volume of 3.88 mL. An anode, made of carbon veil fibre with a coating of activated carbon powder, was placed inside the ceramic cylinder, while the cathode was attached to the outer surface of the structure. Three types of cathodes were tested: i) activated carbon as the control (AC), ii) AC with a graphene ink coating (AC+G) and iii) AC with graphene ink and magnetite powder blend (AC+G+M). Experiments were conducted in triplicate using activated sludge and urine inoculum and thereafter continuously supplemented with 100% real human urine. The results show that the control produced up to 0.85 mW (219 W/m<sup>3</sup>), while AC+G produced 1.22 mW (312 W/m<sup>3</sup>), and AC+G+M 1.12 (288 W/m<sup>3</sup>) which is a 44 % and a 32 % increase respectively in comparison to the control. Comparison of linear sweep voltammetry (LSV) showed superior performance of both modified electrodes against the unmodified AC cathode; further resulting in an enhancement of ORR reaction rate. Power outputs from this work show over 14 times improvement in power density levels in comparison to larger reactors of 20 times the volume, as well as comparable raw (actual) power levels. This makes these novel small-scale bioreactors particularly attractive for use in numerous practical applications such as energy autonomous robots (e.g. EcoBots) and multi-modular stacks for off-grid energy sources.</p> <p> </p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aman Dongre ◽  
Monika Sogani ◽  
Kumar Sonu ◽  
Zainab Syed ◽  
Gopesh Sharma

Pollution caused by chemical and dairy effluent is a major concern worldwide. Dairy wastewaters are the most challenging to treat because of the presence of various pollutants in them. The characteristics of effluent like temperature, color, pH, Dissolved Oxygen, Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD), Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD), dissolved solids, suspended solids, chloride, sulfate, oil, and grease depend solely on the volume of milk processed and the form of finished produce. It is difficult to select an efficient wastewater treatment method for the dairy wastewaters because of their selective nature in terms of pH, flow rate, volume, and suspended solids. Thus there exists a clear need for a technology or a combination of technologies that would efficiently treat the dairy wastewaters. This chapter explains the energy-generating microbial fuel cell or MFC technologies for dairy wastewaters treatment having different designs of MFCs, mechanism of action, different electrode materials, their surface modification, operational parameters, applications and outcomes delivered through the technology in reducing the COD, BOD, suspended solids and other residues present in the wastewaters. The chapter also elaborates on the availability of various natural low-cost anode materials which can be derived from agricultural wastes. The current chapter elaborates on MFC technology and its tools used for dairy wastewater treatment, providing useful insight for integrating it with existing conventional wastewater treatment methods to achieve the degradation of various dairy pollutants including emerging micropollutants.


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