| Literature DB >> 27563887 |
Yong Jiang1, Peng Liang2, Panpan Liu3, Yanhong Bian4, Bo Miao5, Xueliang Sun6, Helan Zhang7, Xia Huang8.
Abstract
In the monitoring of pollutants in an aquatic environment, it is important to preserve water quality safety. Among the available analysis methods, the microbial fuel cell (MFC) sensor has recently been used as a sustainable and on-line electrochemical microbial biosensor for biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and toxicity, respectively. However, the effect of the background organic matter concentration on toxicity monitoring when using an MFC sensor is not clear and there is no effective strategy available to avoid the signal interference by the combined shock of BOD and toxicity. Thus, the signal interference by the combined shock of BOD and toxicity was systematically studied in this experiment. The background organic matter concentration was optimized in this study and it should be fixed at a high level of oversaturation for maximizing the signal output when the current change (ΔI) is selected to correlate with the concentration of a toxic agent. When the inhibition ratio (IR) is selected, on the other hand, it should be fixed as low as possible near the detection limit for maximizing the signal output. At least two MFC sensors operated with high and low organic matter concentrations and a response chart generated from pre-experiment data were both required to make qualitative distinctions of the four types of combined shock caused by a sudden change in BOD and toxicity.Entities:
Keywords: biosensor; microbial fuel cell; signal interference; toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27563887 PMCID: PMC5037672 DOI: 10.3390/ijms17091392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The use of the microbial fuel cell (MFC) sensor for organic matter detection: (A) the use of the MFC sensor for organic matter detection (0–5 mM) in a continuous flow-through mode; (B) the correlation of the output plateau current with the acetate concentration, which was used to select the typical background concentrations.
Figure 2The background organic matter concentration affects the toxicity monitoring: (A) the effect of background organic matter concentration on the current change (ΔI) of the MFC sensor for toxicity monitoring; (B) the effect of background organic matter concentration on the inhibition ratio (IR) of the MFC sensor for toxicity monitoring.
Figure 3The signal interference of an MFC sensor by the combined shock of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and toxicity in a continuous flow-through mode: (A) the MFC sensor operated with background acetate of 0.3 mM; (B) the MFC sensor operated with background acetate of 5 mM.
Figure 4Response chart generated from MFC sensors run with high and low background concentrations of organic matter, respectively. Four types of combined shock caused by BOD and toxicity can be qualitatively distinguished using the response chart based on the ΔI (A) and IR (B).