4.7 Article

Dual role of macrophytes in constructed wetland-microbial fuel cells using pyrrhotite as cathode material: A comparative assessment

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 263, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.128354

Keywords

Constructed wetland; Microbial fuel cell; Cathode; Pyrrhotite; Plant role; Bioelectricity generation

Funding

  1. Irish Research Council, Republic of Ireland [GOIPD/2017/1367]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Anhui Province, China [1808085QE144]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of China [41472047, 41702043, 41772038]
  4. Irish Research Council (IRC) [GOIPD/2017/1367] Funding Source: Irish Research Council (IRC)

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This study investigated the long-term roles of wetland plants in bioelectricity generation and contaminant removal in constructed wetland-microbial fuel cells. Results showed that while wetland plants enhanced bioelectricity generation, oxygen released from the roots could have a negative impact on power production.
In the recent years many studies have shown that wetland plants play beneficial roles in bioelectricity enhancement in constructed wetland-microbial fuel cell (CW-MFC) because of the exudation of root oxygen and root exudates. In this study, the long-term roles of plants on the bioelectricity generation and contaminant removal were investigated in multi-anode (Anode1 and Anode2) and single cathode CWMFCs. The electrode distances were 20 cm between Anode1-cathode and 10 cm between Anode2cathode, respectively. Additionally, the employment of natural conductive pyrrhotite mineral as cathode material was firstly investigated in CW-MFC system. A cathode potential of -98 +/- 52 mV to -175 +/- 60 mV was achieved in the unplanted (CW-MFC 1), and planted CW-MFCs with Iris pseudacorus (CW-MFC 2), Lythrum salicaria (CW-MFC 3), and Phragmites australis (CW-MFC 4). The maximum power densities of Anode1-cathode and Anode2-cathode were 8.23 and 15.29 mW/m(2) in CW-MFC 1, 8.51 and 1.67 mW/m(2) in CW-MFC 2, 5.67 and 3.15 mW/m(2) in CW-MFC 3, and 7.59 and 14.71 mW/m(2) in CWMFC 4, respectively. Interestingly, smaller power density was observed at Anode2-cathode, which has shorter electrode distance than Anode1-cathode in both CW-MFC 2 and CW-MFC 3, which indicates the negative role of oxygen released from the flourished plant roots at Anode2 micro-environment in power production. Therefore, recovering power from commercial CW-MFCs with flourished plants will be a challenge. The contradiction between keeping short electrode distance and avoiding the interference from plant roots to maintain anaerobic anode may be solved by the proposed modular CW-MFCs. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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