Microbes have been evolving for millions of years to efficiently
digest organic material. Now researchers are tapping these natural
processes to maximize energy output from the breakdown and use it to
power farms and even waste facilities.
One process,
developed by researchers at Michigan State University, mimics the
natural mechanism of waste digestion and generates 20 times more energy
than existing processes by creating ethanol and hydrogen for fuel cells.
Two Bacteria Are Better than One
Instead of using one microbe to break down cellulose in
a fermenter, Gemma Reguera, an associate professor of Microbiology and
Molecular Genetics from Michigan State University, is using two
bacteria.
The process recreates a symbiotic relationship between
bacteria and fungi – the same relationship responsible for breaking down
organic material in nature.
The technology goes by many names, including microbial
electrolysis cells, and microbial electrochemical cells, but the guiding
principle remains the same: using microbes to digest waste and produce a
usable by-product. These by-products include hydrogen and ethanol.
A chemical pretreatment on the organic matter synthetically
reproduces the fungi’s role in the process. The researchers then
screened bacteria to find the two that could work together to
efficiently degrade the feedstock.
Using two bacteria instead of one is unique, but extremely
useful: in the device, one bacterium creates ethanol and non-ethanol
fermentation products, and the other converts these products into
electricity. The electrons are removed to produce hydrogen, which is
stored in a fuel cell to create electricity.
The fermentation process alone recovered around 50 percent of the
energy as ethanol. Add in the production of hydrogen, and the energy
recovery reaches 73 percent.Once scaled up and further optimized, Reguera sees this research allowing farmers to process their agricultural wastes into ethanol and hydrogen, which can be stored and used as a household or transportation fuel.
Waste Powered Waste Treatment
Meanwhile, in Arizona, Cesar Torres, an assistant professor of Chemical Engineering from Arizona State University, and his team envision a future where the energy from our waste is used to power the facilities that treat it.
His research is focused on identifying and solving problems that limit electrical output in microbial electrochemical cells. The paper published by his team in the journal ChemSusChem outlines and provides some solutions to the problem of losing voltage at the cathode in microbial fuel cells.
Torres expects more fundamental knowledge about microbial
fuel cells to lead to solutions that increase power outputs to
economically attractive levels. Many companies are currently investing
in commercializing these technologies for various applications, says
Torres. For example, his team is working with a company seeking to
commercialize a technology that turns food and beverage waste into
hydrogen.
But Torres also sees a future for this technology at a
city-wide scale. The result, researchers hope, could be municipal
wastewater treatment plants that are energy neutral, or even energy
positive.
“A big step now is the path towards commercialization,”
says Torres. “Hopefully, through more fundamental research, we can get
to the point where we can design a good microbial fuel cell that can be
used commercially.”
Top image: Cells of the bacteria Shewanella putrefaciens CN32. Courtesy Department of Energy.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/07/microbes-treat-waste-and-produce-power
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