| Literature DB >> 28956857 |
Tuoyu Zhou1, Huawen Han2, Pu Liu3, Jian Xiong4, Fake Tian5, Xiangkai Li6.
Abstract
With the unprecedented deterioration of environmental quality, rapid recognition of toxic compounds is paramount for performing in situ real-time monitoring. Although several analytical techniques based on electrochemistry or biosensors have been developed for the detection of toxic compounds, most of them are time-consuming, inaccurate, or cumbersome for practical applications. More recently, microbial fuel cell (MFC)-based biosensors have drawn increasing interest due to their sustainability and cost-effectiveness, with applications ranging from the monitoring of anaerobic digestion process parameters (VFA) to water quality detection (e.g., COD, BOD). When a MFC runs under correct conditions, the voltage generated is correlated with the amount of a given substrate. Based on this linear relationship, several studies have demonstrated that MFC-based biosensors could detect heavy metals such as copper, chromium, or zinc, as well as organic compounds, including p-nitrophenol (PNP), formaldehyde and levofloxacin. Both bacterial consortia and single strains can be used to develop MFC-based biosensors. Biosensors with single strains show several advantages over systems integrating bacterial consortia, such as selectivity and stability. One of the limitations of such sensors is that the detection range usually exceeds the actual pollution level. Therefore, improving their sensitivity is the most important for widespread application. Nonetheless, MFC-based biosensors represent a promising approach towards single pollutant detection.Entities:
Keywords: MFC; application; biosensors; environmental monitoring; toxicity detection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28956857 PMCID: PMC5677232 DOI: 10.3390/s17102230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Diagram of a dual chamber microbial fuel cell (MFC).
Figure 2A schematic representation of three microbial extracellular electron transfer mechanisms at anode electrode of MFCs. (a) direct transfer via contact and c-type cytochromes; (b) indirect electron transfer by electron shuttles; (c) direct electron transfer by conductive nanowires.
Figure 3Schematic MFC-based VFA biosensor with three chambers. AEM: anion exchange membrane; CEM: cation exchange membrane.
MFCs as BOD biosensors.
| Source Inoculum | MFC Configuration | Electrode Material | Detection Range (BOD, mg L−1) | Saturation Signal | Response Time (min) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Double chamber | Anode: Pt; cathode: Carbon | 10–300 | 0.120 mA | 70 | [ | |
| MFC effluent | Double chamber | Graphite felt | 2.58–206.4 | 1.1 mA a | 30–600 | [ |
| River sediment | Double chamber | Graphite felt | 5 | ND | 180 | [ |
| MFC effluent | Double-chamber | ND | 50–100 | 1.85 mA a | 36 | [ |
| Activated sludge | Double chamber | Graphite felt | 23–200 | 6 mA a | 60 | [ |
| River sediments | Double chamber | Graphite felt | 2–10 | 6 mA | 60 | [ |
| Activated sludge | Single chamber | Graphite roll | Glucose: 1000–25,000 b | 1.6 mv a | 60 | [ |
| Primary wastewater | Single chamber | Carbon cloth | COD: 50–1000 b | 0.4 mA | 40 | [ |
| Domestic wastewater | Double chamber | Carbon paper | 17–183 | 222 mA | 30 | [ |
| Underground water | Single chamber | Carbon paper | 10–250 | 233 mA | <40.2 | [ |
| Activated sludge | Double chamber | Carbon cloth | 50–650 | 0.6 mA a | 80 | [ |
| Neat human urine | Single chamber | Carbon fibre | Urine: 67–813 b | 297 mV | 69–960 | [ |
ND: No data available in original work. a: Estimated using data presented by the authors. b: BOD monitoring capability was demonstrated by using artificial wastewater as the exemplar substrate.
Figure 4Simplified view of a single-chamber MFC-based BOD biosensor.
Figure 5A typical dual-chamber microbial fuel cell used as a toxicity biosensor.
MFCs as heavy metal biosensors.
| Heavy Metals | Source Inoculum | MFC Configuration | Electrode Material | Voltage or Current | Inhibition Ratio | Detection Range (mg L−1) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hg, Pb | Activated sludge | Double chamber | Carbon felt | 0.026–0.040 mA | -- | 1–10 | [ |
| Fe, Mn | Iron-oxidizing bacterial consortia | Double chamber | Graphite rod | 0.4–0.6 mA 0.1–0.3 mA | -- | Fe: 168–1120 Mn: 5.5–165 | [ |
| KAl(SO4)2·12H2O | MFC effluent | Double chamber | Glassy carbon | 6–6.75 A m2−1 a | -- | 50–500 | [ |
| Cu | Soil | Double chamber | Carbon felt | 52–354 mV | -- | 50–400 | [ |
| Cr, Fe | Fresh wastewater | Single chamber | Carbon felt | 53–125 mV | -- | Cr: 1–8 | [ |
| 118–121 mV | Fe: 1–48 | ||||||
| Cr | Double chamber | Plain porous carbon paper | 81–258 mV a | -- | 0.0125–5 | [ | |
| Cu | Domestic wastewater | Single chamber | Carbon felt | -- | 30–85% | 5–7 | [ |
| Cu, Ni, Cd | Activated sludge | Single chamber | Carbon cloth | -- | Cu: 7.5–22.5% | Cu: 1–10 | [ |
| Cd: 10–60% | Cd: 0.1–1.0 | ||||||
| Ni: 3–10% a | Ni: 0.1–1.0 | ||||||
| Cu, Zn | Double chamber | Carbon cloth | -- | Cu: 0–115% | Cu: 0.063–0.189 | [ | |
| Zn: 0–100% b | Zn: 0.065–0.195 | ||||||
| Cu,Hg Zn, Cd Pb, Cr | Anaerobic sludge | Double chamber | Graphite felts | -- | Cu: 7.9–18.48% | Cu: 1–4 | [ |
| Hg: 13.99% | Other metals: 0–2 | ||||||
| Zn: 8,81% | |||||||
| Cd: 9.29% | |||||||
| Pb: 5.59% | |||||||
| Cr: 1.95% | |||||||
| Cu, Zn Cr, Cd | Anaerobic sludge | Double chamber | Carbon felt | -- | Cu: 1.02–9.31% | Cu: 1–25 | [ |
| Zn: 0.70–4.16% | Zn: 15–80 | ||||||
| No data for Cr and Cd | Cr: 0.3–1Cd: 0.4–10 |
a: Estimated using data presented by the authors. b: Electrogenesis effect.
MFCs as organic toxin biosensors.
| Organic Substrate | Source Inoculum | MFC Configuration | Electrode Material | Voltage or Current | Inhibition Ratio | Detection Range (mg L−1) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diazinon | Activated sludge | Double chamber | Carbon felt | -- | 55–61% | 1–10 | [ |
| Polychlorinated biphenyls | Activated sludge | Double chamber | Carbon felt | -- | 29–38% | 1–5 | [ |
| Acephate | Activated sludge | Single chamber | Carbon cloth | -- | 8.54–13.34% | 1–7 | [ |
| Glyphosate | Cyanobacteria CAWBG64 | Double chamber | Carbon cloth | 0–125% | -- | 0.169–0.507 | [ |
| Formaldehyde | Double chamber | Ti/Ni/Au layer | 0–200 mV | -- | 100 | [ | |
| Formaldehyde | Single chamber | Graphite rod | 0–200 mV | -- | 100–1000 | [ | |
| Double chamber | Carbon felt | 115–150 mV | -- | 50–200 | [ | ||
| Formaldehyde | Wild-type | Single chamber | Carbon cloth | 0.014–0.023 mA | -- | 10–100 | [ |
| Levofloxacin | No Data | Single chamber | Carbon felt | 0.41–0.2 mA | -- | 0.0001–1 | [ |
| Formaldehyde | MFC effluent | Double chamber | Graphite felt | 0.22–0.5 mA | -- | 5–100 | [ |