Conversion of Wastes into Bioelectricity and Chemicals by Using Microbial Electrochemical Technologies
Pennsylvania State University · Ghent University
Abstract
Waste biomass is a cheap and relatively abundant source of electrons for microbes capable of producing electrical current outside the cell. Rapidly developing microbial electrochemical technologies, such as microbial fuel cells, are part of a diverse platform of future sustainable energy and chemical production technologies. We review the key advances that will enable the use of exoelectrogenic microorganisms to generate biofuels, hydrogen gas, methane, and other valuable inorganic and organic chemicals. Moreover, we examine the key challenges for implementing these systems and compare them to similar renewable energy technologies. Although commercial development is already underway in several different…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 80.38
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 64
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Microbial fuel cell
- Renewable energy
- Biochemical engineering
- Environmental science
- Biomass (ecology)
- Chemical energy
- Fuel cells
- Waste management