articleScienceJan 18, 2002Closed access

Electrode-Reducing Microorganisms That Harvest Energy from Marine Sediments

University of Massachusetts Amherst · United States Naval Research Laboratory

PubMed
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Abstract

Energy in the form of electricity can be harvested from marine sediments by placing a graphite electrode (the anode) in the anoxic zone and connecting it to a graphite cathode in the overlying aerobic water. We report a specific enrichment of microorganisms of the family Geobacteraceae on energy-harvesting anodes, and we show that these microorganisms can conserve energy to support their growth by oxidizing organic compounds with an electrode serving as the sole electron acceptor. This finding not only provides a method for extracting energy from organic matter, but also suggests a strategy for promoting the bioremediation of organic contaminants in subsurface environments.

Citation impact

1,417
total citations
FWCI
40.79
Percentile
100%
References
17
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Anoxic waters
  • Microbial fuel cell
  • Microorganism
  • Oxidizing agent
  • Environmental science
  • Electron acceptor
  • Environmental chemistry
  • Organic matter
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life below water
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