1. Indigo-Mediated Semi-Microbial Biofuel Cell Using an Indigo-Dye Fermenting Suspension.
- Author
-
Kikuchi, Mayu, Sowa, Keisei, Nakagawa, Kasumi, Matsunaga, Momoka, Ando, Akinori, Kano, Kenji, Takeuchi, Michiki, and Sakuradani, Eiji
- Subjects
- *
BIOMASS energy , *ENZYMES , *POWER density , *ACETALDEHYDE , *OPEN-circuit voltage , *REDOX polymers , *MICROBIAL fuel cells - Abstract
Aizome (Japanese indigo dyeing) is a unique dyeing method using microbial activity under anaerobic alkaline conditions. In indigo-dye fermenting suspensions; microorganisms reduce indigo into leuco-indigo with acetaldehyde as a reductant. In this study; we constructed a semi-microbial biofuel cell using an indigo-dye fermenting suspension. Carbon fiber and Pt mesh were used as the anode and cathode materials, respectively. The open-circuit voltage (OCV) was 0.6 V, and the maximum output power was 32 µW cm−2 (320 mW m−2). In addition, the continuous stability was evaluated under given conditions starting with the highest power density; the power density rapidly decreased in 0.5 h due to the degradation of the anode. Conversely, at the OCV, the anode potential exhibited high stability for two days. However, the OCV decreased by approximately 80 mV after 2 d compared with the initial value, which was attributed to the performance degradation of the gas-diffusion-cathode system caused by the evaporation of the dispersion solution. This is the first study to construct a semi-microbial biofuel cell using an indigo-dye fermenting suspension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF