4.7 Article

Stacked multi-electrode design of microbial electrolysis cells for rapid and low-sludge treatment of municipal wastewater

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR BIOFUELS
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13068-019-1368-0

Keywords

Microbial electrolysis cells; High electric current; Stacked electrode design; Primary clarifier effluent; Rapid organic removal; Low-sludge wastewater treatment system

Funding

  1. Discovery Grants (Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada) [435547-2013]
  2. Canada Research Chairs Program (Governmental of Canada) [950-2320518]
  3. Leaders Opportunity Fund (Canada Foundation for Innovation) [31604]
  4. Ontario Research Fund: Research Infrastructure (Ministry of Research and Innovation) [31604]
  5. International Excellence Award (McMaster University, 2016)

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BackgroundMicrobial electrolysis cells (MECs) can be used for energy recovery and sludge reduction in wastewater treatment. Electric current density, which represents the rate of wastewater treatment and H-2 production, is not sufficiently high for practical applications of MECs with real wastewater. Here, a sandwiched electrode-stack design was proposed and examined in a continuous-flow MEC system for more than 100days to demonstrate enhanced electric current generation with a large number of electrode pairs.ResultsThe current density was boosted up to 190 A/m(3) or 1.4 A/m(2) with 10 electrode pairs stacked in an MEC fed with primary clarifier effluent from a municipal wastewater treatment plant. High organic loading rate (OLR) resulted in high electric current density. The current density increased from 40 to 190 A/m(3) when the OLR increased from 0.5-2kg-COD/m(3)/day to 8-16kg-COD/m(3)/day. In continuous-flow operation with two stacked MECs in series, the biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) removal was 902% and the chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal was 75 +/- 9%. In addition, the sludge production was 0.06g-volatile suspended solids (VSS)/g-COD removed at a hydraulic retention time of only 0.63h. The electric energy consumption was low at 0.40 kWh/kg-COD removed (0.058 kWh/m(3)-wastewater treated).Conclusions The MECs with the stacked electrode design successfully enhanced the electric current generation. The high OLR is important to maintain the high electric current. The organics were removed rapidly and the total suspended solids (TSS) and VSS were reduced substantially in the continuous-flow MEC system. Therefore, the MECs with the stacked electrode design can be used for the rapid and low-sludge treatment of domestic wastewater.

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