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Getting more electricity from sewage: just add gold?

By | July 26, 2010, 4:00 AM PDT

Gold is helping researchers from Oregon State University improve the generation of electricity from microbes. Potentially, the nanotech might prove useful in the realms of water treatment and renewable energy.

Bacteria placed within the anode chamber of a fuel cell (a multi-anode microbial electrolysis cell, MEC) multiply to form a biofilm. As they grow, the bacteria, such as Shewanella oneidensis, release electrons.

Publishing their work recently in Biosensors and Bioelectronics, researchers from Oregon State University say gold nano-coatings on the anodes can help produce 20 more times the amount of electricity than graphite anodes without the coating. Palladium coatings also helped, but not significantly. They are also looking at how cheaper coatings such as iron might effect electrical output with certain kinds of bacteria.

So far, the technology only works in the lab, but the hope is that MECs might one day help treat (as well as possibly desalinate) water while they generate power. Energy self-sufficient sewage plants would prove useful in remote areas that lack the power supplies needed to adequately ldeal with water contamination issues.

Frank Chaplen, an associate professor of biological and ecological engineering, in a statement:

This is an important step toward our goal. We still need some improvements in design of the cathode chamber, and a better understanding of the interaction between different microbial species. But the new approach is clearly producing more electricity.

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Image: Flickr_louise-paisley

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Melissa Mahony

About Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2010 to 2011.

Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony

Contributing Editor, Energy

Melissa Mahony has written for Scientific American Mind, Audubon Magazine, Plenty Magazine and LiveScience. Formerly, she was an editor at Wildlife Conservation magazine. She holds degrees from Boston College and New York University's Science, Health, and Environmental Reporting Program. She is based in New York.

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Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony

Melissa does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers. She currently works for the Wildlife Conservation Society as an editor. Should Melissa cover a topic in which the WCS is involved, she will disclose this fact in her writing.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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