Publication | Open Access
Hydrogen Production with a Microbial Biocathode
498
Citations
18
References
2007
Year
Electrode SurfaceChemical EngineeringHydrogen ProductionEngineeringBioenergeticsMicrobial BiocathodeMicrobial Electrochemical SystemBioelectrochemical ReactorBiocathode ChamberEnvironmental MicrobiologyMicrobiologyHydrogenBiofuel CellMedicineBioelectrochemical SystemElectrolysis Of WaterElectrochemistry
This paper, for the first time, describes the development of a microbial biocathode for hydrogen production that is based on a naturally selected mixed culture of electrochemically active micro-organisms. This is achieved through a three-phase biocathode startup procedure that effectively turned an acetate- and hydrogen-oxidizing bioanode into a hydrogen-producing biocathode by reversing the polarity of the electrode. The microbial biocathode that was obtained in this way had a current density of about -1.2 A/Nm2 at a potential of -0.7 V. This was 3.6 times higher than that of a control electrode (-0.3 A/m2). Furthermore, the microbial biocathode produced about 0.63 m3 H2/m3 cathode liquid volume/day at a cathodic hydrogen efficiency of 49% during hydrogen yield tests, whereas the control electrode produced 0.08 m3 H2/m3 cathode liquid volume/day at a cathodic hydrogen efficiency of 25%. The effluent of the biocathode chamber could be used to inoculate another electrochemical cell that subsequently also developed an identical hydrogen-producing biocathode (-1.1 A/m2 at a potential of -0.7 V). Scanning electron micrographs of both microbial biocathodes showed a well-developed biofilm on the electrode surface.
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