We present a study on a microbial electrolysis cell with methanogenic microorganisms adapted to reduce CO2 to CH4 with the direct injection of electrons and without the artificial addition of H2 or an additional carbon source except gaseous CO2. This is a new approach in comparison to previous work in which both bicarbonate and gaseous CO2 served as the carbon source. The methanogens used are known to perform well in anaerobic reactors and metabolize H2 and CO2 to CH4 and water. This study shows the biofilm formation of those microorganisms on a carbon felt electrode and the long‐term performance for CO2 reduction to CH4 using direct electrochemical reduction. CO2 reduction is performed simply by electron uptake with gaseous CO2 as the sole carbon source in a defined medium. This “electrometabolism” in such microbial electrolysis cells depends strongly on the potential applied as well as on the environmental conditions. We investigated the performance using different adaption mechanisms and a constant potential of −700 mV vs. Ag/AgCl for CH4 generation at 30–35 °C. The experiments were performed by using two‐compartment electrochemical cells. Production rates with Faradaic efficiencies of around 22 % were observed.
Microbial electrosynthetic cells containing Methylobacterium extorquens were studied for the reduction of CO2 to formate by direct electron injection and redox mediator‐assisted approaches, with CO2 as the sole carbon source. The formation of a biofilm on a carbon felt (CF) electrode was achieved while applying a constant potential of −0.75 V versus Ag/AgCl under CO2‐saturated conditions. During the biofilm growth period, continuous H2 evolution was observed. The long‐term performance for CO2 reduction of the biofilm with and without neutral red as a redox mediator was studied by an applied potential of −0.75 V versus Ag/AgCl. The neutral red was introduced into the systems in two different ways: homogeneous (dissolved in solution) and heterogeneous (electropolymerized onto the working electrode). The heterogeneous approach was investigated in the microbial system, for the first time, where the CF working electrode was coated with poly(neutral red) by the oxidative electropolymerization thereof. The formation of poly(neutral red) was characterized by spectroscopic techniques. During long‐term electrolysis up to 17 weeks, the formation of formate was observed continuously with an average Faradaic efficiency of 4 %. With the contribution of neutral red, higher formate accumulation was observed. Moreover, the microbial electrosynthetic cell was characterized by means of electrochemical impedance spectroscopy to obtain more information on the CO2 reduction mechanism.
The ability of Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans to remove chromium and other metals from LD slag was examined. Additionally the option to retrieve P from LD slag was evaluated. Due to the facts that A. ferrooxidans is a facultative anaerobic microorganism and LD slag is an alkaline and oxidic material, both oxidative and reductive bioleaching experiments were carried out. In the reductive mode, four different gas atmospheres (nitrogen, carbon dioxide, air and a mixture of N2 and CO2) were considered. Promising results were obtained by reductive bioleaching with A. ferrooxidans and a pure carbon dioxide atmosphere, 83 % chromium could be removed. In comparison, only 27 % Cr were removed by oxidative bioleaching. The degree of P removal could not be easily determined due to imbalanced data obtained.
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