Mediated Most microbial cells are electrochemically inactive. Electron transfer from microbial cells to the
electrode is facilitated by mediators such as
thionine,
pyocyanin,
methyl viologen,
methyl blue,
humic acid, and
neutral red. Most available mediators are expensive and toxic.
Mediator-free Mediator-free microbial fuel cells use electrochemically active bacteria such as
Shewanella putrefaciens and
Aeromonas hydrophila to transfer electrons directly from the bacterial respiratory enzyme to the electrode. Some bacteria are able to transfer their electron production via the
pili on their external membrane. Mediator-free MFCs are less well characterized, such as the
strain of bacteria used in the system, type of
ion-exchange membrane and system conditions (temperature, pH, etc.) Mediator-free microbial fuel cells can run on
wastewater and derive energy directly from certain plants and O2. This configuration is known as a plant microbial fuel cell. Possible plants include
reed sweetgrass,
cordgrass, rice, tomatoes,
lupines and
algae. Given that the power is obtained using living plants (
in situ-energy production), this variant can provide ecological advantages.
Microbial electrolysis One variation of the mediator-less MFC is the microbial electrolysis cell (MEC). While MFCs produce electric current by the bacterial decomposition of organic compounds in water, MECs partially reverse the process to generate hydrogen or methane by applying a voltage to bacteria. This supplements the voltage generated by the microbial decomposition of organics, leading to the
electrolysis of water or methane production. A complete reversal of the MFC principle is found in
microbial electrosynthesis, in which
carbon dioxide is reduced by bacteria using an external electric current to form multi-carbon organic compounds.
Soil-based Soil-based microbial fuel cells adhere to the basic MFC principles, whereby soil acts as the nutrient-rich anodic media, the
inoculum and the
proton exchange membrane (PEM). The
anode is placed at a particular depth within the soil, while the
cathode rests on top the soil and is exposed to air. Soils naturally
teem with diverse microbes, including
electrogenic bacteria needed for MFCs, and are full of complex sugars and other nutrients that have accumulated from plant and animal material decay. Moreover, the
aerobic (oxygen consuming) microbes present in the soil act as an oxygen filter, much like the expensive PEM materials used in laboratory MFC systems, which cause the
redox potential of the soil to decrease with greater depth. Soil-based MFCs are becoming popular educational tools for science classrooms. Sediment microbial fuel cells (SMFCs) have been applied for
wastewater treatment. Simple SMFCs can generate energy while decontaminating
wastewater. Most such SMFCs contain plants to mimic constructed wetlands. By 2015 SMFC tests had reached more than 150 L. In 2015 researchers announced an SMFC application that extracts energy and charges a
battery. Salts dissociate into positively and negatively charged ions in water and move and adhere to the respective negative and positive electrodes, charging the battery and making it possible to remove the salt effecting
microbial capacitive desalination. The microbes produce more energy than is required for the desalination process. In 2020, a European research project achieved the treatment of seawater into fresh water for human consumption with an energy consumption around 0.5 kWh/m3, which represents an 85% reduction in current energy consumption respect state of the art desalination technologies. Furthermore, the biological process from which the energy is obtained simultaneously purifies residual water for its discharge in the environment or reuse in agricultural/industrial uses. This has been achieved in the desalination innovation center that Aqualia has opened in Denia, Spain early 2020.
Phototrophic biofilm Phototrophic biofilm MFCs (ner) use a phototrophic
biofilm anode containing photosynthetic microorganism such as
chlorophyta and
candyanophyta. They carry out photosynthesis and thus produce organic metabolites and donate electrons. One study found that PBMFCs display a
power density sufficient for practical applications. The sub-category of phototrophic MFCs that use purely oxygenic photosynthetic material at the anode are sometimes called
biological photovoltaic systems.
Nanoporous membrane The
United States Naval Research Laboratory developed nanoporous membrane microbial fuel cells that use a non-PEM to generate passive diffusion within the cell. The membrane is a nonporous polymer filter (
nylon,
cellulose, or
polycarbonate). It offers comparable power densities to
Nafion (a well-known PEM) with greater durability. Porous membranes allow passive diffusion thereby reducing the necessary power supplied to the MFC in order to keep the PEM active and increasing the total energy output. MFCs that do not use a membrane can deploy anaerobic bacteria in aerobic environments. However, membrane-less MFCs experience cathode contamination by the indigenous bacteria and the power-supplying microbe. The novel passive diffusion of nanoporous membranes can achieve the benefits of a membrane-less MFC without worry of cathode contamination.Nanoporous membranes are also 11 times cheaper than Nafion (Nafion-117, $0.22/cm2 vs. polycarbonate, 2).
Ceramic membrane PEM membranes can be replaced with ceramic materials.
Ceramic membrane costs can be as low as $5.66/m2. The macroporous structure of ceramic membranes allows for good transport of ionic species. The materials that have been successfully employed in ceramic MFCs are
earthenware,
alumina,
mullite,
pyrophyllite, and
terracotta. == Generation process ==