Patented device creates electricity and treats wastewater
Author: Tony Fitzpatrick
Date Published: 2005-08-01
July 7, 2005 — An environmental engineer at Washington University in
St. Louis has created a device similar to a hydrogen fuel cell that
uses bacteria to treat wastewater and create electricity.
Lars Angenent, Ph.D., assistant professor of Chemical Engineering,
and a member of the University's Environmental Engineering Science
Program, has devised a microbial fuel cell which he calls an upflow
microbial fuel cell (UMFC) that is fed continually and, unlike most
microbial fuel cells, works with chambers atop each other rather than
beside each other.
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| David Kilper / WUSTL Photo |
| Jason
He (left) and Lars Angenent inspect their microbial fuel cell. The
researchers want to scale up the device for industrial use. |
|
Angenent has created electricity with the device — in its current
mode, about the size of a thermos bottle — and says it has to be scaled
up considerably to someday handle the two million or so gallons of
wastewater it needs to treat to churn out enough power.
"We have proven we can generate electricity on a small scale,"
Angenent said. "It will take time, but we believe the process has
potential to be used for local electricity generation.
"The upflow microbial fuel cell is a promising wastewater treatment
process and has, as a lab-scale unit, generated electricity and
purified artificial wastewater simultaneously for more than five
months."
A description of the process and research is in the July issue of Environmental Science and Technology.
Angenent's co-authors are Jason He, his doctoral student, and Shelley
D. Minter, Ph.D., of the Saint Louis University Chemistry Department.
Angenent has filed a provisional US patent on the process. He has
received a $40,000 Bear Cub award from Washington University to develop
the concept. The Bear Cub Fund was initiated by the Washington
University vice chancellor for research to support faculty in applied
studies not normally supported by federal grants from NIH, NSF, and
other sources. The purpose of the awards is to support research or
development that is designed to extend basic observations to make them
more attractive for licensing by commercial entities or to serve as the
"foundation" for a start-up company.
Angenent uses a carbon-based foam with a large pore size on which
biofilm grows, allowing him to connect two electrodes in the anode and
cathode chambers with a conductive wire. In a hydrogen fuel cell a
membrane separates the anode and cathode chambers. When hydrogen meets
the anode electrode, it splits into protons and electrons, with protons
going across the membrane to the cathode chamber, and electrons passing
over the wire between electrodes to create a current. Oxygen is added
to the cathode chamber, and on the electrode there is a reaction of
electron plus proton plus oxygen to form water. Catalysts, such as
platinum, are needed on both electrodes to promote the reactions.
"We are doing basically the same thing as is done in a hydrogen fuel
cell with our microbial fuel cell," said Angenent, whose graduate
student, Jason He has done all the research on the process. "We've
found that the bacteria on the anode electrode can act as the catalyst
instead of platinum,"
"The bacteria form a biofilm on the anode electrodes, and what I
want to do is optimize this process so that we get higher currents,
which should allow us to scale up the system,' Angenent said.
Angenent said that producing energy from wastewater should be a high
international priority because of population growth and worldwide
depletion of energy resources. Wastewater, with its high-content
organic matter, also can produce methane and hydrogen fuels, however,
that theoretically more readily usable energy can be produced when
electricity is produced directly in a microbial fuel cell. He noted
that a bioelectricity generating wastewater treatment system in just
one large food-processing plant could power as much as 900 American
single-family households.
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