The effect of high applied voltages on bioanodes of microbial electrolysis cells in the presence of chlorides

被引:33
作者
Baek, Gahyun [1 ]
Shi, Le [1 ]
Rossi, Ruggero [1 ]
Logan, Bruce E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Penn State Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, 231Q Sackett Bldg, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
关键词
Bioanode; Electrochemical disinfection; Free chlorine species; Hydrogen production; Microbial electrolysis cell;
D O I
10.1016/j.cej.2020.126742
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
While most microbial electrolysis cell (MEC) tests and other bioelectrochemical tests use applied voltages (E-ap) of 1 V or less, higher voltages are used in some tests that could lead to the generation of free chlorine species (FCS), from chloride ions, and hydroxyl radicals. To examine the impact of high Eap on bioanodes, MECs were acclimated at E-ap = 1 V, tested for one cycle at an Eap of 3 or 4 V until the same total coulombs were achieved as Eap = 1 V, and then returned to cycles of E-ap = 1 V. All biotic MECs with chloride ions showed severe biofilm damage based on the absence of current production, lack of acetate oxidation, and the absence of hydrogen gas production in subsequent cycles at 1 V. Abiotic tests conducted at Eap = 4 V, with same amount of total coulombs transferred as that which occurred in biotic tests at E-ap = 4 V, showed 1.8-fold higher acetate removal than biotic cells at 4 V, suggesting 43% of generated coulombs could have contributed to microbial inactivation. FCS generation, rather than hydroxyl radical production, was concluded to be the major contribution to oxidation of organics due to small changes in acetate oxidation in the presence of a hydroxyl radical scavenger, and the measurement of FCS. These results demonstrated that high applied voltages should be avoided if bioanodes are needed in bioelectrochemical systems when chloride species are present in the solution.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 45 条
[11]   Performance of a pilot-scale continuous flow microbial electrolysis cell fed winery wastewater [J].
Cusick, Roland D. ;
Bryan, Bill ;
Parker, Denny S. ;
Merrill, Matthew D. ;
Mehanna, Maha ;
Kiely, Patrick D. ;
Liu, Guangli ;
Logan, Bruce E. .
APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2011, 89 (06) :2053-2063
[12]   Impact of applied voltage on methane generation and microbial activities in an anaerobic microbial electrolysis cell (MEC) [J].
Ding, Aqiang ;
Yang, Yu ;
Sun, Guodong ;
Wu, Donglei .
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL, 2016, 283 :260-265
[13]   Controlling Selectivity in the Chlorine Evolution Reaction over RuO2-Based Catalysts [J].
Exner, Kai S. ;
Anton, Josef ;
Jacob, Timo ;
Over, Herbert .
ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION, 2014, 53 (41) :11032-11035
[14]   Removal of Persistent Organic Contaminants by Electrochemically Activated Sulfate [J].
Farhat, Ali ;
Keller, Jurg ;
Tait, Stephan ;
Radjenovic, Jelena .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2015, 49 (24) :14326-14333
[15]   The effect of carbon sources on nitrogen removal performance in bioelectrochemical systems [J].
Feng, Huajun ;
Huang, Baocheng ;
Zou, Yuqin ;
Li, Na ;
Wang, Meizhen ;
Yin, Ju ;
Cong, Yanqing ;
Shen, Dongsheng .
BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY, 2013, 128 :565-570
[16]   Enhanced production of methane from waste activated sludge by the combination of high-solid anaerobic digestion and microbial electrolysis cell with iron-graphite electrode [J].
Feng, Yinghong ;
Zhang, Yaobin ;
Chen, Shuo ;
Quan, Xie .
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL, 2015, 259 :787-794
[17]  
Fischer F, 2015, ENVIRON SCI-PROC IMP, V17, P90, DOI [10.1039/c4em00536h, 10.1039/C4EM00536H]
[18]   Electrochemical disinfection of bacteria-laden water using antimony-doped tin-tungsten-oxide electrodes [J].
Ghasemian, Saloumeh ;
Asadishad, Bahareh ;
Omanovic, Sasha ;
Tufenkji, Nathalie .
WATER RESEARCH, 2017, 126 :299-307
[19]   On the dependence of chlorine by-products generated species formation of the electrode material and applied charge during electrochemical water treatment [J].
Ghernaout, Djamel ;
Naceur, Mohamed Wahib ;
Aouabed, Ali .
DESALINATION, 2011, 270 (1-3) :9-22
[20]   Bacterial Responses to Reactive Chlorine Species [J].
Gray, Michael J. ;
Wholey, Wei-Yun ;
Jakob, Ursula .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF MICROBIOLOGY, VOL 67, 2013, 67 :141-160