4.8 Article

Effects of Substrate Diffusion and Anode Potential on Kinetic Parameters for Anode-Respiring Bacteria

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 19, Pages 7571-7577

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es9015519

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Funding

  1. OpenCEL
  2. LLC
  3. Biohydrogen Initiative of Arizona State University

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The substrate-utilization rate of anode-respiring bacteria (ARB) directly correlates to the current density, one of the main factors in a microbial electrolysis/fuel cell. This study first evaluates the effects of donor-substrate diffusion and anode potential on the estimation of the half-maximum-rate concentration (K-s) and the maximum specific substrate-utilization rate (q(max)) of a mixed culture biofilm in a microbial electrolysis cell oxidizing acetate. The intrinsic K-s value is 119 g COD/m(3), substrate diffusion has a significant impact on K-s estimation, and the effect of the anode potential on K-s is small. The intrinsic q(max). value is 22.3 g COD/g VS-d for an assumed biomass density of 50,000 g VS/m(3) (q(max)X(t) = 1120 kg COD/m(3)-d). The maximum specific growth rate (mu(max)) is 3.2/d which is substantially faster than for acetate-utilizing methanogens and homoacetogens. Although the anode potential affects q(max), substrate diffusion has a negligible effect The measured half-saturation anode potential (E-KA) is very negative, -0.448 V (vs Ag/AgCl), and this low value minimizes anode-potential limitation on the current density and the substrate-utilization rate. Thus, the ARB selected in our biofilm anode were relatively fast growers able to take advantage of their low E-KA Value (-0.448 V).

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