Abstract

Microbial fuel cells are one of the alternative methods that generate green, renewable sources of energy from wastewater. In this study, a new bio-electrochemical system called the sulfide-oxidizing fuel cell (SOFC) is developed for the simultaneous removal of sulfide/sulfide and electricity generation. To improve the application capacity of the SOFC, a system combining sulfate-reducing and sulfide-oxidizing processes for sulfate/sulfide removal and electricity generation was designed. Key factors influencing the sulfide-removal efficiency and electricity-generation capacity of the SOFC are the anolytes and catholytes. The sulfide produced from the sulfate-reducing process is thought to play the key role of an electron mediator (anolyte), which transfers electrons to the electrode to produce electricity. Sulfide can be removed in the anodic chamber of the SOFC when it is oxidized to the element sulfur (S°) through the biochemical reaction at the anode. The performance of wastewater treatment for sulfate/sulfide removal and electricity generation was evaluated by using different catholytes (dissolved oxygen in deionized water, a phosphate buffer, and ferricyanide). The results showed that the sulfate-removal efficiency is 92 ± 1.2% during a 95-day operation. A high sulfide-removal efficiency of 93.5 ± 1.2 and 83.7 ± 2% and power density of 18.5 ± 1.1 and 15.2 ± 1.2 mW/m2 were obtained with ferricyanide and phosphate buffers as the catholyte, respectively, which is about 2.6 and 2.1 times higher than dissolved oxygen being used as a catholyte, respectively. These results indicated that cathode electron acceptors have a direct effect on the performance of the treatment system. The sulfide-removal efficiency and power density of the phosphate buffer SOFC were only slightly less than the ferricyanide SOFC. Therefore, a phosphate buffer could serve as a low-cost and effective pH buffer for practical applications, especially for wastewater treatment. The results presented in this study clearly revealed that the integrated treatment system can be effectively applied for sulfate/sulfide removal and electricity generation simultaneously.

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