Life at the jolt: New insights into fuel cell that uses bacteria to generate electricity

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Bacteria have evolved to utilize almost any chemical as a food source. In the microbial fuel cell bacteria form a biofilm a living community that is attached to the electrode by a sticky sugar and protein coated biofilm matrix. When grown without oxy ...
Bacteria have evolved to utilize almost any chemical as a food source. In the microbial fuel cell, bacteria form a biofilm, a living community that is attached to the electrode by a sticky sugar and protein coated biofilm matrix. When grown without oxygen, the byproducts of bacterial metabolism of waste include carbon dioxide, electrons and hydrogen ions. Electrons produced by the bacteria are shuttled onto the electrode by the biofilm matrix, creating a thriving ecosystem called the biofilm anode and generating electricity. Credit: Janelle Curtis, Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University

Researchers at the Biodesign Institute are using the tiniest organisms on the planet 'bacteria' as a viable option to make electricity. In a new study featured in the journal Biotechnology and Bioengineering, lead author Andrew Kato Marcus and colleagues Cesar Torres and Bruce Rittmann have gained critical insights that may lead to commercialization of a promising microbial fuel cell (MFC) technology.


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