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      Miniaturized Ceramic-Based Microbial Fuel Cell for Efficient Power Generation From Urine and Stack Development

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          Abstract

          One of the challenges in Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC) technology is the improvement of the power output and the lowering of the cost required to scale up the system to reach usable energy levels for real life applications. This can be achieved by stacking multiple MFC units in modules and using cost effective ceramic as a membrane/chassis for the reactor architecture. The main aim of this work is to increase the power output efficiency of the ceramic based MFCs by compacting the design and exploring the ceramic support as the building block for small scale modular multi-unit systems. The comparison of the power output showed that the small reactors outperform the large MFCs by improving the power density reaching up to 20.4 W/m 3 (mean value) and 25.7 W/m 3 (maximum). This can be related to the increased surface-area-to-volume ratio of the ceramic membrane and a decreased electrode distance. The power performance was also influenced by the type and thickness of the ceramic separator as well as the total surface area of the anode electrode. The study showed that the larger anode electrode area gives an increased power output. The miniaturized design implemented in 560-units MFC stack showed an output up to 245 mW of power and increased power density. Such strategy would allow to utilize the energy locked in urine more efficiently, making MFCs more applicable in industrial and municipal wastewater treatment facilities, and scale-up-ready for real world implementation.

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          Most cited references41

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          A review of the substrates used in microbial fuel cells (MFCs) for sustainable energy production.

          Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) have gained a lot of attention in recent years as a mode of converting organic waste including low-strength wastewaters and lignocellulosic biomass into electricity. Microbial production of electricity may become an important form of bioenergy in future because MFCs offer the possibility of extracting electric current from a wide range of soluble or dissolved complex organic wastes and renewable biomass. A large number of substrates have been explored as feed. The major substrates that have been tried include various kinds of artificial and real wastewaters and lignocellulosic biomass. Though the current and power yields are relatively low at present, it is expected that with improvements in technology and knowledge about these unique systems, the amount of electric current (and electric power) which can be extracted from these systems will increase tremendously providing a sustainable way of directly converting lignocellulosic biomass or wastewaters to useful energy. This article reviews the various substrates that have been explored in MFCs so far, their resulting performance, limitations as well as future potential substrates. Copyright (c) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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            Continuous electricity generation at high voltages and currents using stacked microbial fuel cells.

            Connecting several microbial fuel cell (MFC) units in series or parallel can increase voltage and current; the effect on the microbial electricity generation was as yet unknown. Six individual continuous MFC units in a stacked configuration produced a maximum hourly averaged power output of 258 W m(-3) using a hexacyanoferrate cathode. The connection of the 6 MFC units in series and parallel enabled an increase of the voltages (2.02 V at 228 W m(-3)) and the currents (255 mA at 248 W m(-3)), while retaining high power outputs. During the connection in series, the individual MFC voltages diverged due to microbial limitations at increasing currents. With time, the initial microbial community decreased in diversity and Gram-positive species became dominant. The shift of the microbial community accompanied a tripling of the short time power output of the individual MFCs from 73 W m(-3) to 275 W m(-3), a decrease of the mass transfer limitations and a lowering of the MFC internal resistance from 6.5 +/- 1.0 to 3.9 +/- 0.5 omega. This study demonstrates a clear relation between the electrochemical performance and the microbial composition of MFCs and further substantiates the potential to generate useful energy by means of MFCs.
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              One-year operation of 1000-L modularized microbial fuel cell for municipal wastewater treatment

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Front Energy Res
                Front Energy Res
                FER
                Frontiers in Energy Research
                Frontiers
                2296-598X
                01 October 2018
                : 6
                : 84
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Bristol Robotics Laboratory, Bristol BioEnergy Centre, University of the West of England, Bristol, United Kingdom
                [2 ]Department of Applied Sciences, University of the West of England, Bristol, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: Iwona Gajda iwona.gajda@ 123456uwe.ac.uk Ioannis A. Ieropoulos ioannis.ieropoulos@ 123456brl.ac.uk
                [†]

                Present Address: Grzegorz Pasternak, Faculty of Chemistry, University of Science and Technology, Wrocław, Poland

                Article
                FER-06-084
                10.3389/fenrg.2018.00084
                7705131
                33409273
                6e780872-b257-478e-8bd7-d920938e35e8
                © 2018 Gajda, Stinchcombe, Merino-Jimenez, Pasternak, Sanchez-Herranz, Greenman and Ieropoulos

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 26 June 2018
                : 06 August 2018
                Categories
                Original Research

                bioenergy,microbial fuel cell,urine,ceramic membrane,stacking,usable power,module

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