Role of electrode and proton exchange membrane configurations on microbial fuel cell performance toward bioelectricity generation integrated wastewater treatment.

J Environ Sci Health A Tox Hazard Subst Environ Eng

Waste Treatment Lab, Department of Biochemical Engineering and Biotechnology, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, New Delhi, India.

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how varying electrode and membrane sizes, as well as anodic chamber volume, impacted five types of microbial fuel cells (MFC) in treating synthetic wastewater and generating electricity.
  • In batch operation, MFCs with different chamber volumes showed volumetric power densities ranging from 137.72 to 58.13 mW/m, with unit area power densities between 27.04 and 11.94 mW/m.
  • Fed-batch studies indicated that reducing electrode distance improved power density from 22.93 to 36.25 mW/m, achieving a maximum volumetric power density of 135.21 mW/m and a 93.21% chemical oxygen demand (COD) reduction when using higher COD concentrations

Article Abstract

In the present study, the effects of electrode surface area, proton exchange membrane area, and volume of the anodic chamber were investigated on the performance of five different dual chamber microbial fuel cells (MFC) using synthetic wastewater toward wastewater treatment coupled electricity generation. In the batch mode, the five different MFC's were operated with the anodic chamber volumes of 93-890 mL, 17.33-56.77 cm electrode surface area, obtained volumetric power densities of 137.72-58.13 mW/m, and unit area power densities ranging from 27.04 to 11.94 mW/m. Fed-batch studies were done with the MFC having 740 mL anodic chamber volume at different wastewater COD concentrations. The power density per unit area increased from 22.93 mW/m to 36.25 cm when the distance between electrodes was reduced from 10 to 6 cm. A maximum volumetric power density of 135.21 mW/m has been attained with a 6 cm electrode distance with the accomplished COD reduction of 93.21%. The presence of biofilm on the anode has been visualized through the SEM images. The higher COD concentration of wastewater and the fed-batch operation resulted in increased power output and wastewater treatment efficiency.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10934529.2023.2168998DOI Listing

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