Hydrogen-based syntrophy in an electrically conductive biofilm anode
- Authors
- Dhar, Bipro Ranjan; Park, Jeong-Hoon; Park, Hee-Deung; Lee, Hyung-Sool
- Issue Date
- 1-3월-2019
- Publisher
- ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
- Keywords
- Butyrate; Hydrogen; Geobacter; Biofilm conductivity; Acetogenesis; Direct interspecies electron transfer
- Citation
- CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL, v.359, pp.208 - 216
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
- Volume
- 359
- Start Page
- 208
- End Page
- 216
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/67045
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.cej.2018.11.138
- ISSN
- 1385-8947
- Abstract
- We experimentally and theoretically investigated implications of H-2 and a rate-limiting step in a mixed-culture biofilm anode fed with n-butyrate, one of the poorest substrates to exoelectrogens. Acetate and i-butyrate were formed as intermediates during anaerobic degradation of n-butyrate, which suggested oxidative acetogenesis of n-butyrate in syntrophy with H-2 scavengers in the biofilm anode. Methane was not detected in an anode chamber, and no current was generated in the biofilm anode using H-2 as the electron donor. These results indicated that acetogens would be a main H-2 consumer in the biofilm. Pyrosequencing data showed dominance of Geobacter in the biofilm anode (83.6% of total sequences), along with Sphaerochaeta and Treponema, which supports the syntrophy between exoelectrogens and acetogens. Electrical conductivity of the butyrate-fed biofilm anode was as high as 0.67 mS/cm, demonstrating that EET does not limit current density in the biofilm. In-situ monitoring of dissolved H-2 concentration proved H-2 production (up to 12.4 mu M) and consumption during current generation in the biofilm, which supports significance of H-2-based syntrophy in the electrically conductive biofilm using n-butyrate as the primary electron donor.
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Collections - College of Engineering > School of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering > 1. Journal Articles
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