Hydrogen production with a microbial biocathode

被引:351
作者
Rozendal, Rene A. [1 ,2 ]
Jeremiasse, Adriaan W. [1 ,2 ]
Hamelers, Hubertus V. M. [1 ]
Buisman, Cees J. N. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wageningen & Res Ctr, Subdept Environm Technol, NL-6700 EV Wageningen, Netherlands
[2] Wetsus, Ctr Sustainable Water Technol, NL-8900 CC Leeuwarden, Netherlands
关键词
D O I
10.1021/es071720+
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
This paper, for the first time, describes the development of a microbial biocathode for hydrogen production that is based on a naturally selected mixed culture of electrochemically active micro-organisms. This is achieved through a three-phase biocathode startup procedure that effectively turned an acetate- and hydrogen-oxidizing bioanode into a hydrogen-producing biocathode by reversing the polarity of the electrode. The microbial biocathode that was obtained in this way had a current density of about -1.2 A/m(2) at a potential of -0.7 V. This was 3.6 times higher than that of a control electrode (-0.3 A/m(2)). Furthermore, the microbial biocathode produced about 0.63 m(3) H-2/m(3) cathode liquid volume/day at a cathodic hydrogen efficiency of 49% during hydrogen yield tests, whereas the control electrode produced 0.08 m(3) H-2/m(3) cathode liquid volume/day at a cathodic hydrogen efficiency of 25%. The effluent of the biocathode chamber could be used to inoculate another electrochemical cell that subsequently also developed an identical hydrogen-producing biocathode (-1.1 A/m(2) at a potential of -0.7 V). Scanning electron micrographs of both microbial biocathodes showed a well-developed biofilm on the electrode surface.
引用
收藏
页码:629 / 634
页数:6
相关论文
共 26 条
[1]   Organometallic iron: the key to biological hydrogen metabolism [J].
Adams, MWW ;
Stiefel, EI .
CURRENT OPINION IN CHEMICAL BIOLOGY, 2000, 4 (02) :214-220
[2]   Biochemistry - Biological hydrogen production: Not so elementary [J].
Adams, MWW ;
Stiefel, EI .
SCIENCE, 1998, 282 (5395) :1842-1843
[3]   Catalysis of oxygen reduction in PEM fuel cell by seawater biofilm [J].
Bergel, A ;
Féron, D ;
Mollica, A .
ELECTROCHEMISTRY COMMUNICATIONS, 2005, 7 (09) :900-904
[4]  
F Allen J Bard L.R., 2001, Electrochemical Methods: Fundamentals and Applications
[5]   Electron and carbon balances in microbial fuel cells reveal temporary bacterial storage behavior during electricity generation [J].
Freguia, Stefano ;
Rabaey, Korneel ;
Yuan, Zhiguo ;
Keller, Jurg .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2007, 41 (08) :2915-2921
[6]   Application of bacterial biocathodes in microbial fuel cells [J].
He, Zhen ;
Angenent, Largus T. .
ELECTROANALYSIS, 2006, 18 (19-20) :2009-2015
[7]   Investigations of fuel cell reactions at the composite microelectrode|solid polymer electrolyte interface.: I.: Hydrogen oxidation at the nanostructured Pt|Nafion® membrane interface [J].
Jiang, JH ;
Kucernak, A .
JOURNAL OF ELECTROANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2004, 567 (01) :123-137
[8]  
Kim BH, 1999, J MICROBIOL BIOTECHN, V9, P127
[9]   Electrochemically assisted microbial production of hydrogen from acetate [J].
Liu, H ;
Grot, S ;
Logan, BE .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2005, 39 (11) :4317-4320
[10]   Electricity generation using an air-cathode single chamber microbial fuel cell in the presence and absence of a proton exchange membrane [J].
Liu, H ;
Logan, BE .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2004, 38 (14) :4040-4046