Abstract

Microbial electrosynthesis (MES) holds tremendous large scale energy storage potential. By promoting the bioconversion of carbon dioxide (bicarbonate) into useful chemical commodities, this technique utilizes renewable energy and reduces carbon footprint. However, expensive electrode materials, low current densities, and multiple electrosynthesis products are major challenges to this field. To this end, this study examines a multilayered and conductive MXene structure that was coated on a cost-effective biochar substrate and tested as a MES cathode. These results show this coating yielded improved electrical conductivity, increased charge transfer efficiency, and selective microbial enrichment characteristics, resulting in a 2.3-fold increase in cathodic current production in comparison to the uncoated biochar. Moreover, an increase in active sites improved mass transfer and microbial growth, producing 1.7-fold increase in butyrate in comparison to the uncoated control. Considering that electrode attached microbial communities play a major role in final products, microbial community analyses was completed, suggesting that selective microbial enrichment was promoted as Firmicutes (66%), Proteobacteria (13%), and Bacteroidetes (12%) (i.e., exoelectrogenic and butyrate producing phyla) which were dominant in the MXene-coated biochar biofilm. These results show that biochar modification is an effective technique for achieving selective products through MES.

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