| Literature DB >> 26193327 |
Jon Chouler1,2, Mirella Di Lorenzo3.
Abstract
The provision of safe water and adequate sanitation in developing countries is a must. A range of chemical and biological methods are currently used to ensure the safety of water for consumption. These methods however suffer from high costs, complexity of use and inability to function onsite and in real time. The microbial fuel cell (MFC) technology has great potential for the rapid and simple testing of the quality of water sources. MFCs have the advantages of high simplicity and possibility for onsite and real time monitoring. Depending on the choice of manufacturing materials, this technology can also be highly cost effective. This review covers the state-of-the-art research on MFC sensors for water quality monitoring, and explores enabling factors for their use in developing countries.Entities:
Keywords: BOD; microbial fuel cell; microbial sensors; toxicant
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26193327 PMCID: PMC4600167 DOI: 10.3390/bios5030450
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Commercially used field based test methods for common toxicants.
| Toxicant | Threshold Value * (µg·L−1) | Method | Detection Limit (µg·L−1) | Approx. Cost ($ per test) | Test Time (mins) | Source/Company |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arsenic | 10 | Merckoquant test strip | 20–500 | 0.5 | 40 | Merck Millipore |
| Cadmium | 3 | Wagtech Metalyser HM 1000 | 5–1000 | 11.3 | 10 | Wagtech Projects |
| Fluoride | 1500 | Wagtech Potakit(r) | 0–1500 | 6.6 | 40 | Wagtech Projects |
| Lead | 10 | Wagtech Metalyser HM 1000 | 5–1000 | 11.3 | 10 | Wagtech Projects |
| Nitrate (ion) | 50 | Wagtech Potakit(r) | 0–20,000 | 6.6 | 40 | Wagtech Projects |
| Nitrite (ion) | 3 | Wagtech Potakit(r) | 0–20,000 | 6.6 | 40 | Wagtech Projects |
* as recommended by [17].
Figure 1Operating principles of a two-chamber microbial fuel cell (not to scale). The electroactive biofilm at the anode break down an organic substrate to produce electrons, protons and CO2. The electrons pass through an external load to be reduced at the cathode.
Figure 2A schematic of three electron transfer mechanisms of microbes at the anode surface: (a) direct transfer by contact; (b) indirect electron transfer by redox shuttles (S RE = reduced electron shuttle, S OX = oxidized electron shuttle); (c) electron transfer by conductive nanowire matrix.
Figure 3Basic principle of an MFC as a biosensor.
Summary of analytical performance, construction and functional characteristics of MFCs used as BOD.
| Microbe Assayed (Origin) | Anode | Cathode | Membrane Used | Configuration | Detection Range (BOD5, mg·L−1) | Saturation Signal | Response Time | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pt | Carbon | Anion exchange membrane | Two chamber | 10–300 | 120 µA | 70 min | [ | |
| Enriched consortium (waste water) | Graphite felt | Graphite felt | Cation exchange membrane | Two chamber | 2.58–206 (based on charge) | 1.1 mA | 0.5–10 h | [ |
| Consortium (activated sludge) | Graphite felt | Graphite felt | Cation exchange membrane | Two chamber | 23–100 | 6 mA | 1 h | [ |
| Consortium (activated sludge) | Graphite felt | Graphite felt with Pt | Cation exchange membrane | Two chamber | 20–200 | 5.5 mA | 5–36 min | [ |
| Consortium (waste water) | Carbon paper | Carbon cloth with Pt | Cation exchange membrane | Single chamber (air breathing cathode) | 38–324 | 286 mW·m−2 | 0.6 h | [ |
| Consortium (anaerobic sludge) | Graphite granules | Carbon paper with Pt | Cation exchange membrane | Single chamber (air breathing cathode) | 50–500 | 0.6 mA | 40 min–2 h | [ |
| Consortium (primary clarifier) | Carbon paper | Carbon paper with Pt | Cation exchange membrane | Two chamber | 10–250 | 233 mA·m−2 | 40 min | [ |
| Consortium (from an active MFC) | Carbon cloth | Carbon cloth | Cation exchange membrane | Single chamber (air breathing cathode) | 3–164 | 35 µA | 2.8–8.7 min | [ |
Summary of the analytical performance, construction, and functional characteristics of MFCs used as toxicant sensors.
| Microbe/s Assayed (Origin) | Anode | Cathode | Membrane | Toxicant-Detection Range | Baseline Signal | Response Time | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Consortium (Activated sludge) | Graphite felt | Graphite felt | Cation exchange membrane | Diazinon:1–10 mg·L−1 | 0.04 mA | 20 min–2 h | [ |
| Consortium (from an active MFC) | Graphite plate | Graphite plate | Cation exchange membrane | Cu2+ 85 mg·L−1 | 1.37 A·m−2 | 50–100 min | [ |
| Consortium (primary wastewater) | Graphite rod | Graphite rod | Cation exchange membrane | sulfamethaxozole 0.05–1000 μg·L−1 | No Data | No Data | [ |
| Ti/Ni/Au tri-layer | Ti/Ni/Au tri-layer | Cation exchange membrane | Formaldehyde 0.1%–4% | 4 µA·cm−2 | <5 min | [ | |
| Consortium (from an active MFC) | Graphite plate | Graphite plate | Cation exchange membrane | Ni 10 mg·L−1 | 2.25 mA | 30 min | [ |
| Consortium (real domestic wastewater) | Carbon cloth | Carbon cloth coated with Pt | Cation exchange membrane | Cu2+ 5–7 mg·L−1 | No Data | 4 h | [ |
| Consortium (waste-water) | Carbon cloth | PTFE treated carbon cloth with Pt | None | Cr6+ 1–8 mg·L−1 | 0.10–0.12 V | 5 min | [ |
| Consortium (from an active MFC) | Carbon cloth | Carbon cloth | Cation exchange membrane | Cd2+ 0.1–100 µg·L−1 | 32.2 µA | 12 min | [ |