4.7 Article

Impact of Carbon Felt Electrode Pretreatment on Anodic Biofilm Composition in Microbial Electrolysis Cells

Journal

BIOSENSORS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bios11060170

Keywords

bioelectrochemical system; bioelectrodes; biosensor; electrode pretreatment; metagenomic analysis; microbial communities

Funding

  1. European fund for regional development, the program Interreg V-A Austria-Czech Republic, IRAS (Innovative Recycling technology for Ashes) [ATCZ183]
  2. Austrian Climate and Energy Fund within the MELOS project [861392]
  3. K1-MET GmbH, metallurgical competence center
  4. COMET (Competence Center for Excellent Technologies), the Austrian program for competence centers
  5. Federal Ministry for Transport, Innovation, and Technology
  6. Federal Ministry for Digital and Economic Affairs
  7. Styrian Business Promotion Agency (SFG)
  8. province of Upper Austria
  9. province of Tyrol
  10. province of Styria

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This study investigates the impact of electrode pretreatments on microbial enrichment and composition in bioelectrochemical systems. The results show that electrode pretreatments influence microbial diversity, leading to the enrichment of specific electroactive genera, which in turn affects the system's performance.
Sustainable technologies for energy production and storage are currently in great demand. Bioelectrochemical systems (BESs) offer promising solutions for both. Several attempts have been made to improve carbon felt electrode characteristics with various pretreatments in order to enhance performance. This study was motivated by gaps in current knowledge of the impact of pretreatments on the enrichment and microbial composition of bioelectrochemical systems. Therefore, electrodes were treated with poly(neutral red), chitosan, or isopropanol in a first step and then fixed in microbial electrolysis cells (MECs). Four MECs consisting of organic substance-degrading bioanodes and methane-producing biocathodes were set up and operated in batch mode by controlling the bioanode at 400 mV vs. Ag/AgCl (3M NaCl). After 1 month of operation, Enterococcus species were dominant microorganisms attached to all bioanodes and independent of electrode pretreatment. However, electrode pretreatments led to a decrease in microbial diversity and the enrichment of specific electroactive genera, according to the type of modification used. The MEC containing isopropanol-treated electrodes achieved the highest performance due to presence of both Enterococcus and Geobacter. The obtained results might help to select suitable electrode pretreatments and support growth conditions for desired electroactive microorganisms, whereby performance of BESs and related applications, such as BES-based biosensors, could be enhanced.

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