| Literature DB >> 35297316 |
Yamini Koul1,2, Viralkunvar Devda1,2, Sunita Varjani1, Wenshan Guo3, Huu Hao Ngo3, Mohammad J Taherzadeh4, Jo-Shu Chang5, Jonathan W C Wong6, Muhammad Bilal7, Sang-Hyoun Kim8, Xuan-Thanh Bui9,10, Roberto Parra-Saldívar11.
Abstract
Wastewater is one of the most common by-products of almost every industrial process. Treatment of wastewater alone, before disposal, necessitates an excess of energy. Environmental concerns over the use of fossil fuels as a source of energy have prompted a surge in demand for alternative energy sources and the development of sophisticated procedures to extract energy from unconventional sources. Treatment of municipal and industrial wastewater alone accounts for about 3% of global electricity use while the amount of energy embedded in the waste is at least 2-4 times greater than the energy required to treat the same effluent. The microbial electrolysis cell (MEC) is one of the most efficient technologies for waste-to-product conversion that uses electrochemically active bacteria to convert organic matter into hydrogen or a variety of by-products without polluting the environment. This paper highlights existing obstacles and future potential in the integration of Microbial Electrolysis Cell with other processes like anaerobic digestion coupled system, anaerobic membrane bioreactor and thermoelectric micro converter.Entities:
Keywords: Industrial effluents; anaerobic digestion; electrochemical technology; environmental sustainability; resources
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35297316 PMCID: PMC9161901 DOI: 10.1080/21655979.2022.2051842
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineered ISSN: 2165-5979 Impact factor: 6.832
Figure 1.Diagrammatic representation of Double Chamber MEC.
Figure 2.Schematics of different types of Double Chamber MEC.
Figure 3.Diagrammatic Representation of Single Chamber MEC.
Integration of Microbial Electrolysis Cell with other technologies for energy production
| S. No | Integration Type | Type of Electrode | Applied Energy | Type | Hydrogen | Current or Power Density | Remarks | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Microbial Electrolysis Cell-Anaerobic Digestion coupled | Anode: Carbon felt Cathode: stainless-steel | 0 mV | Double chamber | 0.42 ± 0.05 m3 | 2.01 ± 0.63 A/m2 | AD-MEC loop system was used | ||
| 2. Microbial Electrolysis Cell-Anaerobic Digestion coupled | Anode: Carbon brush Cathode: Ti/RuO2 | 0.0–0.8 V | Single chamber | CH4 at 0.4 V | Steady increase in current with applied voltage | To update CH4, AD-MEC was combined. | ||
| 3. Microbial Electrolysis Cell with Hydrogen Bioreactor | Anode: Graphite plate | 0.6 V | Single chamber | 0.53 mmol/h | N/A | At 0.6 V, HBR+MEC produced the best results. | ||
| 4. Thermoelectric micro converter-Microbial Electrolysis Cell coupled system | Anode: Plain CF Cathode: Carbon paper with Platinum. | 0.17 to 0.83 V | Double chamber | 0.16 m3 H2/m3 /d | 0.28 to 1.10 A/m2 | Thermoelectric micro-converter as power source | ||
| 5. Dark fermentation and Microbial Fuel Cell–Microbial Electrolysis Cell coupled system | Anode: Carbon brush Cathode: Platinum coated carbon cloth | 0.33 to 0.47 V | Single chamber | 0.48 m3 H2/m3 /d | 52 A/m3 [MEC] | Combine MFC and forest organics in a stack. |
Figure 4.Formic acid generation using biotic and abiotic electrocatalysis.
Value-added products obtained by employing microbial electrolysis system
| S.No. | Value Added Products | Substrate | Microbial Electrolysis Cell reactor | Voltage Applied | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Hydrogen | Raw food waste | Microbial Electrolysis Cell-Anaerobic Digestion reactor | 0.8 V | ( |
| 2. | Methane | Raw waste | Microbial Electrolysis Cell-Anaerobic Digestion reactor | 0 V, | [ |
| 3. | Formic Acid (HCOOH) | - | Microbial electrolysis | 1.2 V to 2.4 V | [ |
| 4. | Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) | Organic matter | Two-chamber Microbial Electrolysis Cell | 0.5 V | [ |