Frontiers in Energy Research (Mar 2018)

Critical Biofilm Growth throughout Unmodified Carbon Felts Allows Continuous Bioelectrochemical Chain Elongation from CO2 up to Caproate at High Current Density

  • Ludovic Jourdin,
  • Ludovic Jourdin,
  • Sanne M. T. Raes,
  • Cees J. N. Buisman,
  • David P. B. T. B. Strik

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenrg.2018.00007
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Current challenges for microbial electrosynthesis include the production of higher value chemicals than acetate, at high rates, using cheap electrode materials. We demonstrate here the continuous, biofilm-driven production of acetate (C2), n-butyrate (nC4), and n-caproate (nC6) from sole CO2 on unmodified carbon felt electrodes. No other organics were detected. This is the first quantified continuous demonstration of n-caproate production from CO2 using an electrode as sole electron donor. During continuous nutrients supply mode, a thick biofilm was developed covering the whole thickness of the felt (1.2-cm deep), which coincided with high current densities and organics production rates. Current density reached up to −14 kA m−3electrode (−175 A m−2). Maximum sustained production rates of 9.8 ± 0.65 g L−1 day−1 C2, 3.2 ± 0.1 g L−1 day−1 nC4, and 0.95 ± 0.05 g L−1 day−1 nC6 were achieved (averaged between duplicates), at electron recoveries of 60–100%. Scanning electron micrographs revealed a morphologically highly diverse biofilm with long filamentous microorganism assemblies (~400 μm). n-Caproate is a valuable chemical for various industrial application, e.g., it can be used as feed additives or serve as precursor for liquid biofuels production.

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