| Literature DB >> 34071068 |
Enric Blázquez1, David Gabriel1, Juan Antonio Baeza1, Albert Guisasola1, Pablo Ledezma2, Stefano Freguia2.
Abstract
Bio-electrochemical systems (BES) are a flexible biotechnological platform that can be employed to treat several types of wastewaters and recover valuable products concomitantly. Sulfate-rich wastewaters usually lack an electron donor; for this reason, implementing BES to treat the sulfate and the possibility of recovering the elemental sulfur (S0) offers a solution to this kind of wastewater. This study proposes a novel BES configuration that combines bio-electrochemical sulfate reduction in a biocathode with a sulfide-air fuel cell (FC) to recover S0. The proposed system achieved high elemental sulfur production rates (up to 386 mg S0-S L-1 d-1) with 65% of the sulfate removed recovered as S0 and a 12% lower energy consumption per kg of S0 produced (16.50 ± 0.19 kWh kg-1 S0-S) than a conventional electrochemical S0 recovery system.Entities:
Keywords: bio-electrochemical systems (BES); fuel cells (FC); oxygen-reducing cathode; resource recovery; sulfate removal
Year: 2021 PMID: 34071068 PMCID: PMC8197079 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18115571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Schematic of BES-FC setup. The separator consisted of a plastic mesh (5 × 5 mm2 of grid and 1 mm of thickness). It was replaced by rubber after 145 days of operation. CEM: cation-exchange membrane, RE: reference electrode.
Operational conditions in each experimental period.
| Period | Days of Operation | Sulfate Influent | BES-Cathode Potential | pH | HRT | FC Operation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Start-up | 0–52 | 500 | −0.7 to −0.9 | 7.0 | 3.1–1.1 | Off |
| I | 52–87 | 2000 | −0.9 | 7.0 | 1.1 | Off |
| II | 87–94 | 2000 | −0.9 | 7.0 | 1.1 | On |
| III 1 | 94–145 | 2000 | −0.95 | 7.5 | 1.1 | On |
| IV 2 | 145–161 | 2000 | −0.98 ± 0.01 | 7.5 | 1.1 | On |
1 Air-cathode of the FC replaced.2 A non-porous rubber separator was added as physical separation between biocathode and anode, although both chambers remained fluidically connected through the recirculation line (Figure 1). The current density of the BES was controlled at 10 A m−2.
Figure 2Electrochemical techniques for the characterization of the FC; (A): polarization curve of the FC and (B): cyclic voltammetry of the air-cathode at the end of period II and of a new piece of air-cathode. Scan rate of both analyses: 1 mV s−1.
Figure 3Evolution of sulfur species concentration along the BES-FC operation phases, sulfate in the inlet and outlet, total dissolved sulfide (TDS) in the outlet and theoretical elemental sulfur produced (T-S0) in the outlet. N.B. the lack of statistically significant discrepancy between TDS and S0 at the outlet indicate that there is no formation of intermediate sulfur products, as previously shown by Pozo et al. [30].
Figure 4Average plots of the different operational phases of the BES-FC after the start-up on (A): sulfate reduction rate (SRR), sulfide production rate (SPR) and theoretical elemental sulfur production rate (TESPR), (B): elemental sulfur proportion in relation to sulfate reduced, (C): electron recovery as sulfate reduced in the biocathode and (D): current density of BES and FC.
Figure 5Current density of the FC during all the experimental phases. N.B. The start-up and period I are condensed because the FC was in open circuit during this time (no current).