4.8 Article

Oxygen-reducing microbial cathodes in hypersaline electrolyte

Journal

BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 319, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2020.124165

Keywords

Microbial fuel cell; Biocathode; Oxygen reduction; Salt marsh sediments; Thiohalobacter thiocyanaticus

Funding

  1. French state [ANR-14-CE05-0004]

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The use of hypersaline electrolytes can enhance the efficiency of microbial fuel cells, but the bottleneck of O-2 reducing cathodes still needs to be addressed. By designing efficient halotolerant microbial cathodes, especially focusing on Gammaproteobacteria strains related to Thiohalobacter thiocyanaticus, this issue can be overcome.
Hypersaline electrolytes offer a way to boost the development of microbial fuel cells by overcoming the issue due to the low conductivity of the usual media. Efficient halotolerant bioanodes have already been designed but O-2 reducing cathodes remain a strong bottleneck. Here, O-2-reducing biocathodes were designed by using salt marsh sediment as the inoculum and a hypersaline media (45 g/L NaCl) of high conductivity (10.4 S m(-1)). Current density up to 2.2 A m(-2) was reached from potential of +0.2 V/SCE. The efficiency of the biocathodes was correlated to the presence of Gammaproteobacteria strain(s) related to Thiohalobacter thiocyanaticus, which were considerably enriched in the best performing biocathodes. This work opens up new perspectives to overcome the O-2 reduction issue in hypersaline MFCs by designing efficient halotolerant microbial cathodes and pointing out the strains that should now be focused to improve them.

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