Electrode, fuel cell and water treatment device
US-2017309942-A1 · Oct 26, 2017 · US
US12466750B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-12466750-B2 |
| Application number | US-202118018225-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jul 28, 2021 |
| Priority date | Jul 28, 2020 |
| Publication date | Nov 11, 2025 |
| Grant date | Nov 11, 2025 |
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The present invention is directed to an anode comprising an inner layer encapsulating a conductive material and a bacteria, and an outer layer comprising a rigid porous membrane. Further provided is a microbial electrochemical system comprising the herein disclosed anode, and methods of using the same, such as for treating wastewater, waste, hydrogen production, or generating electricity.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1 . An anode comprising: (i) an inner layer encapsulating a conductive material and a microorganism, wherein said inner layer is water soluble; (ii) an outer layer comprising a rigid porous membrane, said outer layer encapsulating said inner layer; and (iii) a metal conductor, wherein said metal conductor is positioned across said outer layer, said inner layer, and in contact with said conductive material. 2 . The anode of claim 1 , wherein said rigid porous membrane is substantially water insoluble. 3 . The anode of claim 1 , wherein said rigid porous membrane is characterized by a pore size between 0.1 μm and 1 μm; and wherein said rigid porous membrane is characterized by a tensile strength between 1 MPa and 100 MPa. 4 . The anode of claim 1 , wherein said inner layer comprises a water soluble polymer selected from the group consisting of: gelatin, dextran, collagen, alginate, chitosan, agarose, poly ethers, poly vinyl alcohol, carrageenan, agar, and any combination thereof. 5 . The anode of claim 1 , wherein said rigid porous membrane is selected from the group consisting of: cellulose, cellulose ester, polyethylene glycol (PEG), polyvinyl-alcohol (PVAL), polyethersulfone (PES), cellulose acetate, cellulose nitrate, ethyl cellulose, nitrocellulose mixed esters, polycarbonate film, nylon, poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF), polysulfone, and any combination thereof. 6 . The anode of claim 1 , wherein said anode is in the form of a particle characterized by a particle size between 0.5 cm and 30 cm. 7 . The anode of claim 1 , wherein said microorganism is deposited on at least one surface of said conductive material. 8 . The anode of claim 1 , wherein said microorganism is a genetically modified microorganism; and wherein said genetically modified microorganism is characterized by exoelectrogenic activity. 9 . The anode of claim 1 , wherein said microorganism is selected from bacteria, archaea, algae, yeast, mold and fungi; and wherein said bacteria comprises a dry culture bacteria, endospores culture bacteria, or viable culture bacteria; optionally wherein said bacteria is an exoelectrogenic bacteria selected from Geobacteraceae, Shewanellaceae, Aeromonadaceae, Alteromonadaceae, Clostridiaceae, Comamonadaceae, Desulfuromonaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, Pasturellaceae, and Pseudomonadaceae. 10 . The anode of claim 1 , wherein said conductive material comprises a conducting redox polymer, carbon nanotube (CNT), graphene, activated carbon, carbon paper, carbon cloth, carbon felt, carbon wool, carbon foam, graphite, porous graphite, graphite powder, graphite granules, graphite fiber, electron conductive polymers, metal, process stimulators and accelerators, or any combination thereof. 11 . The anode of claim 1 , comprising at least two of said metal conductor; optionally wherein said at least two of said metal conductor are positioned parallel to each other. 12 . The anode of claim 1 , wherein said metal conductor comprises silver, copper, gold, platinum, or any combination thereof; and wherein said anode is characterized by an improved electrogenic activity. 13 . A microbial electrochemical system comprising the anode of claim 1 , and a cathode. 14 . The microbial electrochemical system of claim 13 comprising more than 2 of said anode, wherein said anode are in contact through said metal conductor; and wherein said microbial electrochemical system comprises a single-chamber or a dual chamber. 15 . The microbial electrochemical system of claim 13 , for wastewater (WW) treatment, waste treatment, electricity generation, energy generation, hydrogen production, or any combination thereof; wherein said microbial electrochemical system is characterized by any of: (i) an improved chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal capacity, and (ii) chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal in the range of 30% to 99%. 16 . A method comprising: (i) providing the microbial electrochemical system of claim 13 ; (ii) contacting said microbial electrochemical system with a carbon source; and (iii) providing an electric current to said microbial electrochemical system. 17 . The method of claim 16 , for WW treatment, water treatment, waste treatment, hydrogen production, electricity generation, or any combination thereof; optionally wherein said microbial electrochemical system is characterized by COD removal in the range of 30% to 99%. 18 . The method of claim 16 , further comprising a step preceding step (ii), comprising contacting said anode with an aqueous solution, thereby activating said anode. 19 . The method of claim 16 , wherein said anode is substantially devoid of said inner layer. 20 . The method of claim 16 , wherein said carbon source comprises wastewater, acetate, acetic acid, citric acid, citrate, or any combination thereof.
Biochemical fuel cells, i.e. cells in which microorganisms function as catalysts · CPC title
characterised by the material · CPC title
by electrolysis of water · CPC title
Chemical Oxygen Demand [COD]; Biological Oxygen Demand [BOD] · CPC title
Porous electrodes · CPC title
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