Abstract

Based on the most active hydrosphere on the earth, the interplay between adjacent semiconducting minerals and electrochemically active microorganisms was scientifically researched in the marine euphotic zone of the Yellow Sea, China. Fe and Ti were found in suspended minerals by ICP-MS and EDS, probing the element composition of suspended minerals from macro to micro. Moreover, SR-XRD and Raman indicated that semiconducting minerals of iron and titanium metal oxide in situ such as anatase, rutile, brookite, and goethite consisted in suspended minerals, notably, which retained prominent photo-response property and distinct photoelectric catalytic potential under visible light. 16S rRNA gene systematically emerged that electrochemically active microorganisms, such as Pseudomonas and Paraclostridium, were pivotal in the solution and preponderant on the electrode respectively after a period of cultivation. Whereupon a dual-chamber reactor was established to probe into the mechanism of redox reaction and electron transfer process between microorganisms and suspended minerals. Importantly, compared with a graphite electrode, the maximum power density of the reaction was 2.78 times with the increase of suspended minerals as the electron acceptor under dark conditions, as well as 236.53% promotion with visible light. Experiments gave an index that semiconducting minerals could interact with electroactive microorganisms, effectively promoting the process of extracellular electron transfer in the euphotic zone, which will make a foundation for further research on electron energy transfer based on the interactions of semiconducting minerals and electrochemically active microorganisms, as well as the regulation mechanism of elements cycling.

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