Bioresource Technology, Vol.99, No.18, 8887-8894, 2008
Checking graphite and stainless anodes with an experimental model of marine microbial fuel cell
A procedure was proposed to mimic marine microbial fuel cell (MFC) in liquid phase. A graphite anode and a stainless steel cathode which have been proven, separately, to be efficient in MFC were investigated. A closed anodic compartment was inoculated with sediments, filled with deoxygenated seawater and fed with milk to recover the sediment's sulphide concentration. A stainless steel cathode, immersed in aerated seawater, used the marine biofilm formed on its surface to catalyze oxygen reduction. The cell implemented with a 0.02 m(2-)graphite anode supplied around 0.10 W/m(2) for 45 days. A power of 0.02 W/m(2) was obtained after the anode replacement by a 0.06 m(2)-stainless steel electrode. The cell lost its capacity to make a motor turn after one day of operation, but recovered its full efficiency after a few days in open circuit. The evolution of the kinetic properties of stainless steel was identified as responsible for the power limitation. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.