Ferroelectric perovskite oxides are
emerging as a promising photoactive
layer for photovoltaic applications because of their very high stability
and their alternative ferroelectricity-related mechanism for solar
energy conversion that could lead to extraordinarily high efficiencies.
One of the biggest challenges so far is to reduce their band gap toward
the visible region while simultaneously retaining ferroelectricity.
To address these two issues, herein an elemental composition engineering
of BiFeO
3
is performed by substituting Fe by Co cations,
as a means to tune the characteristics of the transition metal–oxygen
bond. We demonstrate by solution processing the formation of epitaxial,
pure phase, and stable BiFe
1–
x
Co
x
O
3
thin films for
x
≤ 0.3 and film thickness up to 100 nm. Importantly, the band
gap can be tuned from 2.7 to 2.3 eV upon cobalt substitution while
simultaneously enhancing ferroelectricity. As a proof of concept,
nonoptimized vertical devices have been fabricated and, reassuringly,
the electrical photoresponse in the visible region of the Co-substituted
phase is improved with respect to the unsubstituted oxide.
The aim of this study was to investigate the PHB and glycogen accumulation dynamics in two photobioreactors inoculated with different monocultures of wastewater-borne cyanobacteria, using a three-stage feeding strategy (growth phase, feast-famine phase and feast phase). Two cyanobacterial monocultures containing members of Synechocystis sp.or Synechococcus sp. were collected from treated wastewater and inoculated in lab-scale photobioreactors to evaluate the PHB and glycogen accumulation. A third photobioreactor with a complex microbial community grown in real wastewater was also
Seven photosynthethic microbiomes were collected from field environmental samples to test their potential in polyhydroxybutirate (PHB) and exopolysaccharides (EPS) production, two alternatives to chemical-based polymers. Microscope observations together with microbial sequence analysis revealed the microbiome enrichment in cyanobacteria after culture growth under phosphorus limitation. PHB and EPS production was studied under three culture factors (phototrophy, mixotrophy and heterotrophy) by evaluating and optimizing the effect of three parameters (organic and inorganic carbon and days under light:dark cycles) by Box-Behnken design. Results showed that optimal conditions for both biopolymers synthesis were microbiome-dependent; however, the addition of organic carbon boosted PHB production in all the tested microbiomes, producing up to 14%dcw PHB with the addition of 1.2 g acetate L-1 and seven days under light:dark photoperiods. The highest EPS production was 59 mg L-1 with the addition of 1.2 g acetate L-1 and four days under light:dark photoperiods. The methodology used in this article is suitable for enriching microbiomes in cyanobacteria, and for testing the best conditions for bioproducts synthesis for further scale up.
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