Journal
TRENDS IN BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 262-271Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tibtech.2010.01.007
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Hydrogen gas provides exceptional value as an energy carrier and industrial feedstock, but currently is produced entirely by reforming fossil fuels. Biological hydrogen production (BioH(2)), which offers the possibility of being renewable and carbon neutral, can be achieved by photosynthesis, fermentation, and microbial electrolysis cells. This review introduces the principles, advantages and challenges of each approach to BioH(2). Photosynthetic BioH(2) is the ultimate renewable source, since it directly uses inexhaustible resources: sunlight energy and electrons from H2O. However, it presents major technical challenges, particularly due to oxygen sensitivity. Fermentative BioH(2) offers a high production rate, but poor conversion efficiency from the organic substrate to H-2. The microbial electrolysis cell can achieve high conversion efficiency, but is an emerging technology.
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