Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California Davis, 1 Shields Avenue, Davis, CA, 95616, USA.
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California Davis, 1 Shields Avenue, Davis, CA, 95616, USA.
Chemosphere. 2022 May;294:133594. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.133594. Epub 2022 Jan 11.
Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) are a promising technology for simultaneous wastewater treatment and the biological conversion of organics to electrical energy. Yet effective MFC utilization of complex waste streams like human urine is limited by interference from high-strength organics (>5000 mg L total organic carbon) and concentrated macronutrients (>500 mg L nitrogen and phosphorus). This research assesses potential gains in MFC energy performance and organics treatment achieved by incorporating MFCs as a tertiary step in a human urine nutrient recovery system. The bioelectrochemical performance of benchtop-scale, low-cost MFCs was assessed using pre-treated human urine that was depleted in ammonium-nitrogen and phosphate (the "waste bottoms" of the urine nutrient recovery system). Performance of MFCs with waste bottoms as feedstock was compared to MFC performance with hydrolyzed real urine and synthetic urine as feedstocks. MFCs with waste bottoms produced 16.2 ± 14.8 mW m (2.14 ± 1.95 W m), equivalent to 93% of the mean power density achieved by hydrolyzed urine after 32 days of operation. Coulombic efficiency over the full experimental runtime was 32.3 ± 4.1% higher for waste bottoms than urine. Waste bottoms helped avoid fouling of the ceramic membrane separator that occurs with urea hydrolysis and phosphate precipitation from urine. Enhanced ion separation was also observed, producing neutral pH in the anolyte and high pH (11.5) and electrical conductivity (25 dS m) in the catholyte. While several gains in performance were observed when using waste bottoms as feedstock, anolyte organics removal decreased 36.5% in MFCs with waste bottoms. This research indicates that pretreatment of source-separated urine via nutrient removal improves MFC electrical power generation and ion separation.
微生物燃料电池(MFC)是一种很有前途的技术,可同时用于废水处理和有机物质的生物转化为电能。然而,对于像人类尿液这样复杂的废水,有效的 MFC 利用受到高强度有机物(>5000mg/L 总有机碳)和浓缩营养物质(>500mg/L 氮和磷)的干扰。本研究评估了将 MFC 作为人类尿液营养回收系统的三级步骤,在提高 MFC 能量性能和有机物处理方面的潜力。使用预处理的人类尿液(尿液营养回收系统的“废水底”)评估了台式、低成本 MFC 的生物电化学性能,该尿液已耗尽铵氮和磷酸盐。用废水底作为原料的 MFC 的性能与用水解的实际尿液和合成尿液作为原料的 MFC 的性能进行了比较。用废水底作为原料的 MFC 产生的 16.2±14.8mW m(2.14±1.95W m),相当于经过 32 天运行后水解尿液的平均功率密度的 93%。在整个实验运行期间,废水底的库仑效率比尿液高 32.3±4.1%。废水底有助于避免尿素水解和尿液中磷酸盐沉淀引起的陶瓷膜分离器结垢。还观察到增强的离子分离,在阳极电解液中产生中性 pH(7)和高 pH(11.5)和电导率(25dS m)在阴极电解液中。尽管用废水底作为原料时观察到了一些性能的提高,但在使用废水底的 MFC 中,阳极有机物质去除率下降了 36.5%。本研究表明,通过去除营养物对源分离尿液进行预处理可以提高 MFC 的发电和离子分离性能。