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Investigating the effects of fluidic connection between microbial fuel cells

Winfield, Jonathan; Ieropoulos, Ioannis; Greenman, John; Dennis, Julian

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Authors

Yannis Ieropoulos Ioannis2.Ieropoulos@uwe.ac.uk
Professor in Bioenergy & Director of B-B

Julian Dennis



Abstract

Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) can 'treat' wastewater but individually are thermodynamically restricted. Scale-up might, therefore, require a plurality of units operating in a stack which could introduce losses simply through fluidic connections. Experiments were performed on two hydraulically joined MFCs (20 cm apart) where feedstock flowed first through the upstream unit (MFCup) and into the downstream unit (MFCdown) to explore the interactive effect of electrical load connection, influent make-up and flow-rate on electrical outputs. This set-up was also used to investigate how calculating total internal resistance based on a dynamic open circuit voltage (OCV) might differ from using the starting OCV. When fed a highly conductive feedstock (∼4,800 μS) MFCdown dropped approximately 180 mV as progressively heavier loads were applied to MFCup (independent of flow-rate) due to electron leakages through the medium. The conductivities of plain acetate solutions (5 and 20 mM) were insufficient to induce losses in MFCdown even when MFCup was operating at high current densities. However, at the highest flow-rate (240 mL/h) MFCdown dropped by approximately 100 mV when using 5 and 220 mV using 20 mM acetate. When the distance between MFCs was reduced by 5 cm, voltage drops were apparent even at lower flow-rates, (30 mL/h decreased the voltage by 115 mV when using 20 mM acetate). Shear flow-rates can introduce dissolved oxygen and turbulence all capable of affecting the anodic biofilm and redox conditions. Calculating total internal resistance using a dynamic OCV produced a more stable curve over time compared to that based on the starting constant OCV. © 2010 Springer-Verlag.

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date May 1, 2011
Deposit Date Aug 6, 2012
Publicly Available Date Apr 10, 2016
Journal Bioprocess and Biosystems Engineering
Print ISSN 1615-7591
Electronic ISSN 1615-7605
Publisher Springer (part of Springer Nature)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 34
Issue 4
Pages 477-484
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s00449-010-0491-x
Keywords fluidic connection, microbial fuel cells
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/972389
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00449-010-0491-x
Additional Information Additional Information : The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00449-010-0491-x
Contract Date Apr 10, 2016

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