Novel Methanogenic Rotatable Bioelectrochemical System Operated with Polarity Inversion
- 13 December 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Environmental Science & Technology
- Vol. 45 (2), 796-802
- https://doi.org/10.1021/es102482j
Abstract
A novel membraneless bioelectrochemical system termed rotatable bioelectrochemical contactor (RBEC) was fabricated and evaluated for its ability to recover useful energy (here methane) from a low organic strength wastewater. We studied the operational characteristics of the RBEC by operating it as a three-electrode electrolysis cell. A stack of conductive disks (each subdivided into two half disks), similar to rotating biological contactors, were rotated with one-half disk immersed in the wastewater and the other into the gas headspace. By carrying out regular half rotations (180° rotation) the anode became the cathode and vice versa. This operation resulted in the build-up of a biofilm that could catalyze both an anodic acetate oxidation and a cathode-driven methanogenesis. Methane production rate was directly proportional to the applied electrical energy. Increase in current density (from 0.16 to 4.1 A m−2) resulted in a faster COD removal (from 0.2 to 1.38 kg COD m−3 day−1) and methane production (from 0.04 to 0.53 L L−1 day−1). Of the electrons flowing across the circuit, over 80% were recovered as methane. Such methane production was electrochemically driven by the headspace-exposed cathodic half disks, which released the methane directly to the gas-phase. Energy analysis shows that the new design requires less energy for COD removal than what is typically required for oxygen supply in activated sludge processes. Because the system could operate without wastewater recirculation against gravity; additional pH buffer chemicals; ion-exchange membranes or electrochemical catalysts, it has desirable characteristics for process up-scale. Further, the current report shows the first example of a BES with identical biofilm (due to intermittent polarity inversion) on both electrodes.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Selectivity versus Mobility: Separation of Anode and Cathode in Microbial Bioelectrochemical SystemsChemSusChem, 2009
- Microbial Electrolysis Cells for High Yield Hydrogen Gas Production from Organic MatterEnvironmental Science & Technology, 2008
- Towards practical implementation of bioelectrochemical wastewater treatmentTrends in Biotechnology, 2008
- Cathodic limitations in microbial fuel cells: An overviewJournal of Power Sources, 2008
- Non-catalyzed cathodic oxygen reduction at graphite granules in microbial fuel cellsElectrochimica Acta, 2007
- Microbial ecology meets electrochemistry: electricity-driven and driving communitiesThe ISME Journal, 2007
- Microbial Fuel Cells: Methodology and TechnologyEnvironmental Science & Technology, 2006
- Microbial Fuel Cells in Relation to Conventional Anaerobic Digestion TechnologyEngineering in Life Sciences, 2006
- Effects of Membrane Cation Transport on pH and Microbial Fuel Cell PerformanceEnvironmental Science & Technology, 2006
- Challenges and Constraints of Using Oxygen Cathodes in Microbial Fuel CellsEnvironmental Science & Technology, 2006