| Literature DB >> 31847277 |
Chaolin Fang1, Varenyam Achal1,2.
Abstract
The global energy crisis and heavy metal pollution are the common problems of the world. It is noted that the microbial fuel cell (MFC) has been developed as a promising technique for sustainable energy production and simultaneously coupled with the remediation of heavy metals from water and soil. This paper reviewed the performances of MFCs for heavy metal removal from soil and water. Electrochemical and microbial biocatalytic reactions synergistically resulted in power generation and the high removal efficiencies of several heavy metals in wastewater, such as copper, hexavalent chromium, mercury, silver, thallium. The coupling system of MFCs and microbial electrolysis cells (MECs) successfully reduced cadmium and lead without external energy input. Moreover, the effects of pH and electrode materials on the MFCs in water were discussed. In addition, the remediation of heavy metal-contaminated soil by MFCs were summarized, noting that plant-MFC performed very well in the heavy metal removal.Entities:
Keywords: heavy metals; microbial electrolysis cell; microbial fuel cell; wastewater
Year: 2019 PMID: 31847277 PMCID: PMC6955973 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms7120697
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Figure 1Schematic of a typical two-chamber microbial fuel cell.
Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) for the removal of heavy metals from wastewater.
| Metal | MFC Fabrication | Maximum Removal | Maximum Power | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cu(II) | Single-chamber MFC, | 98.3% | 10.2 W/m3 | [ |
| Cu(II) | Two-chamber MFC, | 99.88% (Anaerobic) | 0.43 W/m2 (Anaerobic) | [ |
| Cr(VI) | Two-chamber MFC, | 100%(a) | 1221.91 mW/m2 | [ |
| Cr(VI) and V(V) | Two-chamber MFC, | 75.4% ± 1.9% Cr(VI) | 970.2 ± 20.6 mW/m2 | [ |
| Cd(II) | Single-chamber MFC; | 90% | 3.6 W/m2 | [ |
| Cr(VI) and Cd(II) | Two double-chambers MFC–MEC (microbial electrolysis cell), | 13.95% ± 0.73% | 22.5 W/m2 | [ |
| Hg(II) | Two-chamber MFC, | i.3.08 ± 0.07 mg/L | i. 318.7 mW/m2 | [ |
| Ag(I) | Two-chamber MFC, | 99.91% ± 0.00% | 4.25 W/m2 | [ |
| Ag(I) | Two-chamber MFC, | i. 0.109 ± 0017 mM | 109 mW/m2 | [ |
| Au(III) | Two-chamber MFC | 99.88% | 6.58 W/m2 | [ |
| V(V) | Two-chamber MFC, | 100% | 529 ± 12 mW/m2 | [ |
| Tl(I) | Single-chamber MFC, | 67.2% | 457.8 ± 15.2 mW/m2 | [ |
| Cr(VI) and Pb(II) | Two double-chamber MFC–MEC, | Pb(II) reduction efficiency 100%; | 702.86 mW/m2 | [ |
MFCs for the removal of heavy metals from soil.
| Metal | MFC Fabrication | Reduction Reaction Description | Maximum RemovalEfficiency | Maximum Power Generation | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cu(II) | Single-chamber MFC | Cu 600 mg/kg, sodium acetate 6.00 g/L, | N/A | 65.77 mW/m2 | [ |
| Pb(II) and | Two-chamber MFC, | i. Pb(II) 910 mg/kg, 108 d; | i. 44.1% | i. 3.6 mW/cm2 | [ |
| Cr(VI) | Two-chamber MFC | Cr(VI) 255 mg/kg in red clay soil, pH = 4.80; | 99.1% | N/A | [ |
| Zn(II) andCd(II) | Three-chamber MFC | Zn(II) 11.6 g/kg, Cd(II) 0.84 g/kg, | 25% (Zn) | 0.4A/m2 | [ |
| Cr(VI) | Single-chamber plant MFC | Cr(VI) 9.5mg/L and 19 mg/L | 99% | 55 mA/m2 | [ |
| Cr(VI) | Single-chamber plant MFC | Cr(IV) 500 mg/kg, | 99% | 469.21 mV | [ |