| Literature DB >> 26666392 |
Yue Dong1, Yujie Feng1, Youpeng Qu2, Yue Du1, Xiangtong Zhou1, Jia Liu1.
Abstract
Energy self-sufficiency is a highly desirable goal of sustainable wastewater treatment. Herein, a combined system of a microbial fuel cell and an intermittently aerated biological filter (MFC-IABF) was designed and operated in an energy self-sufficient manner. The system was fed with synthetic wastewater (COD = 1000 mg L(-1)) in continuous mode for more than 3 months at room temperature (~25 °C). Voltage output was increased to 5 ± 0.4 V using a capacitor-based circuit. The MFC produced electricity to power the pumping and aeration systems in IABF, concomitantly removing COD. The IABF operating under an intermittent aeration mode (aeration rate 1000 ± 80 mL h(-1)) removed the residual nutrients and improved the water quality at HRT = 7.2 h. This two-stage combined system obtained 93.9% SCOD removal and 91.7% TCOD removal (effluent SCOD = 61 mg L(-1), TCOD = 82.8 mg L(-1)). Energy analysis indicated that the MFC unit produced sufficient energy (0.27 kWh m(-3)) to support the pumping system (0.014 kWh m(-3)) and aeration system (0.22 kWh m(-3)). These results demonstrated that the combined MFC-IABF system could be operated in an energy self-sufficient manner, resulting to high-quality effluent.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26666392 PMCID: PMC4678297 DOI: 10.1038/srep18070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Voltage curve (a), anode and cathode potentials (b) of MFC during 6 charging and discharging cycles. Electrode potentials were reported versus the Ag/AgCl reference electrode (+197 mV vs a standard hydrogen electrode).
Figure 2Power density, anode and cathode potentials over time of MFCs: (a) power density output of MFC-1, MFC-2 at 2 month and 5 month; (b) anode and cathode potentials of MFC-1, MFC-2 at 2 month and 5 month. The letters “A P” and “C P” in (b) represent anode potential and cathode potential. All electrode potentials were reported versus the Ag/AgCl reference electrode (+197 mV vs a standard hydrogen electrode).
Figure 3Wastewater treatment performance of combined MFC-IABF system.
The value inside the figure was removal rate in terms of SCOD and TCOD (influent COD = 1000 mg/L).
Figure 4Changes of DO concentration at the bottom of IABF reactor in a charging (5 min) and discharging (1 min) cycle.
The first point was measured after the capacitor-based circuit finished one-minute discharging process. The following five points were measured during five-minute charging process (one-minute interval).
Energy production and consumption in combined MFC-IABF system.
| Feeding Energy | Energy consumption (kWh m−3) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.3 (10−8) | 0.2 | 4% | 1.1 (10−6) | 1.4 (10−2) | |||||
| Aeration Energy | Energy consumption (kWh m−3) | ||||||||
| 3.3 (10−7) | 8.314 | 298 | 0.283 | 1 | 1.02 | 3% | 1.8 (10−5) | 0.22 | |
| Produced energy(kWhm−3) | 0.27 | ||||||||
aAssume energy efficiency of 4% in conversion of electrical energy to pump energy.
bStandard air has a specific weight of 1.2 kg m−3 (298 K, 1 atm, and a relative humidity of 36%).
cP2 was calculated depending on the depth of IABF reactor, without considering other pressure loss.
dAssume energy efficiency for aerator of 3%.
Comparison of pump efficiency η in different reported systems.
| System | Energy consumption | Energy efficiency ( | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| EMBR | Pumping | 64.6% | |
| MBER | Pumping | 100% | |
| MFC –AFMBR | Pumping | 65% | |
| AFMBR | Pumping | 64.6% | |
| MFC-IABF | Pumping and aeration | 4% and 3% | This research |
Figure 5Schematic diagram of: (a) the MFC reactor, (b) the two-stage combined MFC-IABF system. The green triangles indicated the sampling points of MFC and IABF reactors for liquid quality analyses. The blue and white lines indicated the directions of liquid and air flow.