“…Therein, nanomaterials with biocompatibility and high electrical conductivity are used to develop self-sustaining heterojunctions that ensure efficient EET processes. A series of investigations on abiotic/biotic coupling heterojunctions (e.g., nanostructured polymer−biofilms and/or graphene/ CNTs−enzymes, Table 1) revealed that overlapping heterojunction structures favored microbial substrate utilization and charge transfer, thereby boosting bio-electricity generation (Lv et al, 2018;Ray et al, 2020;Su et al, 2020;Zhao et al, 2015a). In particular, multiple lines of orbits constructed in these overlapping heterojunction architectures are mostly layer-ordered, multidirectional and highly conductive, thereby favoring the transport of microbial substrates and boosting surface/interface dynamic reactions (Wang et al, 2016;Xie et al, 2015).…”