Abstract

This study assessed cell voltage development, electricity recovery, and microbial community composition in response to initial substrate including acetate, xylose, acetate/xylose 1:1 mixture (ace/xyl), and bioethanol effluent (BE) during microbial fuel cell (MFC) operation at 1000 Ω external resistance. The BE mainly contained 20.5g/L xylose, 1.8g/L arabinose, and 2.5g/L propionic acid. The MFCs initially fed with acetate showed shorter initiation time (1day), higher average cell voltage (634 ± 9mV), and higher coulombic efficiency (31.5 ± 0.5%) than those initially fed with ace/xyl or xylose. However, BE-initiated MFCs only generated 162 ± 1mV. The acetate-initiated MFCs exhibited longer adaptation time (21h) and lower cell voltage (645 ± 10mV) when the substrate was switched to xylose, whereas substrate switching to BE produced the highest voltage (656mV), maximum power density (362 ± 27mW/m(2)), maximum current density (709 ± 27mA/m(2)), and coulombic efficiency (25 ± 0.5%) in the acetate-initiated MFCs. The microbial community in acetate-initiated MFCs was less diverse and contained more electrogenic bacteria (13.9 ± 0.4%) including Geobacter sulfurreducens and Desulfuromonas acetexigen than the MFCs initially fed with ace/xyl, xylose, and BE. After switching the substrate to xylose and subsequently to BE, the microbial community in the acetate-initiated MFCs became more diverse, while no significant changes were observed in ace/xyl-, xylose-, and BE-initiated MFCs. The results showed that initial substrate affected the power generation and the capability to adapt to the substrate alteration in MFCs. Acetate-initiated MFCs showed best performance in utilizing BE.

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