Litcius/Paper detail

The oxygen dilemma: The challenge of the anode reaction for microbial electrosynthesis from CO2

Maliheh Abdollahi, Sara Al Sbei, Miriam A. Rosenbaum, Falk Harnisch

2022Frontiers in Microbiology37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

provides chemicals and fuels by driving the metabolism of microorganisms with electrons from cathodes in bioelectrochemical systems. These microorganisms are usually strictly anaerobic. At the same time, the anode reaction of bioelectrochemical systems is almost exclusively water splitting through the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). This creates a dilemma for MES development and engineering. Oxygen penetration to the cathode has to be excluded to avoid toxicity and efficiency losses while assuring low resistance. We show that this dilemma derives a strong need to identify novel reactor designs when using the OER as an anode reaction or to fully replace OER with alternative oxidation reactions.

Topics & Concepts

ElectrosynthesisAnodeCathodeOxygen evolutionRedoxOxygenChemistryMicrobial fuel cellChemical engineeringBiochemical engineeringElectrochemistryInorganic chemistryElectrodeOrganic chemistryEngineeringPhysical chemistryMicrobial Fuel Cells and BioremediationCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsElectrocatalysts for Energy Conversion