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Copyright (c) 2004 Bell & Howell Information and Learning Company. All rights reserved.
Saturday, March 13, 2004
Goho, Alexandra

Fuel cell draws energy from waste A team of environmental engineers at

Pennsylvania State University has created a fuel cell that breaks down organic

matter in wastewater and, in the process, generates small amounts of

electricity.

 

The researchers say this dual activity could significantly reduce the costs

associated with current water treatment in industrialized countries and make

such treatment more widely available in developing countries.

 

The prototype fuel cell consists of a cylindrical Plexiglas chamber, 15

centimeters long and 6.5 cm wide, in which the researchers arranged eight

graphite rods around a hollow carbon-and-platinum tube. The rods serve as

negative electrodes, or anodes, and the tube serves as a positive electrode, or

cathode.

 

When the researchers pump a sample of wastewater from the local treatment plant

into the fuel cell, bacteria in the water stick to the graphite rods.

There, the microbes break down the sample's organic matter in a process that

extracts electrons from the waste and transfers them to the rods. From there,

the electrons flow through a wire to the cathode, generating electricity.

 

The breakdown of the organic matter also generates protons, which migrate

through the wastewater toward the cathode. There, the protons combine with

electrons and oxygen to form pure water.

 

Researchers have already fabricated microbial fuel cells that run on glucose

(SN: 10/25/03, p. 270). However, says lead investigator Bruce Logan of Penn

State in University Park, "I don't think anybody believed that you could do

this with domestic wastewater."


"It's a completely new concept for treating wastewater," concurs Bruce

Rittmann, an environmental engineer at Northwestern University in Evanston,

Ill.


Current treatment facilities use bacterialaden tanks to clean wastewater. To do

their job, the bacteria require oxygen, which accepts electrons from the waste.

Half of the $25 billion spent annually on wastewater treatment in the United

States goes to aerating tanks, according to the Association of Metropolitan

Sewerage Agencies.


The fuel cell-based wastewater-treatment system could eliminate this costly

requirement, Logan says. What's more, the electricity the fuel cell generates

could be used to pump water through the system.


So far, the fuel cell can produce up to 150 milliwatts of electricity per

square meter of electrode surface. With improvements to the system, "I think we

can probably reach something on the order of 500 to 1,000 milliwatts per square

meter," says Logan. This would be enough power to pump an entire community's

waste.


He and his colleagues describe their new fuel cell in an upcoming issue of

Environmental Science & Technology.

 

Currently, the bacteria in the Penn State fuel cell can eliminate close to 80

percent of the organic matter in wastewater, a performance approaching that of

existing treatment methods. By covering the electrodes with specific strains of

bacteria that are especially adept at breaking down waste, the researchers

could make such devices even more efficient, Rittmann says.


The fuel cell also needs to become less expensive, says Logan. he and his

colleagues are exploring different materials that would reduce the costs of its

components. -A. GOHO