Abstract

Inorganic carbon (HCO3-) was efficiently converted into acetate (204.4 ± 0.5 mM with a coulombic efficiency of 96 ± 3% over 24 days operation) in a photo-assisted microbial electrosynthesis system (MES) using a urea-treated MnFe2O4/g-C3N4 cathode and the nonphotosynthetic bacteria Serratia marcescens Q1. The remarkable photocatalytic performance of MnFe2O4/g-C3N4 heterojunction was resulted from the charge transfer mechanism switch (from type II to Z-scheme) induced by the synergistic effect of oxygen vacancies and pyrrolic N after urea treatment. The increased pyrrolic N was conductive to photoinduced electron transfer while the oxygen vacancies provided a higher fraction of surface-active sites for H2 evolution, which was metabolized in-situ with bicarbonate by S. marcescens Q1 to yield acetate via the Wood–Ljungdahl pathway. This study provides a simple and feasible strategy for switching the photocatalytic charge transfer in a spinel-based heterojunction and offers new insights for ingeniously synthesizing photocatalysts with high CO2 conversion in MES.

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