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      Development and modification of materials to build cost-effective anodes for microbial fuel cells (MFCs): An overview

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      Biochemical Engineering Journal
      Elsevier BV

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          A review of renewable energy sources, sustainability issues and climate change mitigation

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            Conversion of wastes into bioelectricity and chemicals by using microbial electrochemical technologies.

            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 applications, ranging from wastewater treatment to industrial chemical production, further research is needed regarding efficiency, scalability, system lifetimes, and reliability.
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              Microbial fuel cells: From fundamentals to applications. A review

              In the past 10–15 years, the microbial fuel cell (MFC) technology has captured the attention of the scientific community for the possibility of transforming organic waste directly into electricity through microbially catalyzed anodic, and microbial/enzymatic/abiotic cathodic electrochemical reactions. In this review, several aspects of the technology are considered. Firstly, a brief history of abiotic to biological fuel cells and subsequently, microbial fuel cells is presented. Secondly, the development of the concept of microbial fuel cell into a wider range of derivative technologies, called bioelectrochemical systems, is described introducing briefly microbial electrolysis cells, microbial desalination cells and microbial electrosynthesis cells. The focus is then shifted to electroactive biofilms and electron transfer mechanisms involved with solid electrodes. Carbonaceous and metallic anode materials are then introduced, followed by an explanation of the electro catalysis of the oxygen reduction reaction and its behavior in neutral media, from recent studies. Cathode catalysts based on carbonaceous, platinum-group metal and platinum-group-metal-free materials are presented, along with membrane materials with a view to future directions. Finally, microbial fuel cell practical implementation, through the utilization of energy output for practical applications, is described.
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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                Biochemical Engineering Journal
                Biochemical Engineering Journal
                Elsevier BV
                1369703X
                December 2020
                December 2020
                : 164
                : 107779
                Article
                10.1016/j.bej.2020.107779
                eca551ee-dea6-430b-93cf-ced1bc696af5
                © 2020

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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