Optimizing bioelectromethanosynthesis of CO2 and membrane fouling mitigation in MECs via in-situ biogas recirculation

  • Weijie Hu
  • , Shaojuan Zheng
  • , Jiayi Wang
  • , Xueqin Lu
  • , Yule Han
  • , Juan Wang
  • , Guangyin Zhen*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

The CO2 bioelectromethanosynthesis via two-chamber microbial electrolysis cell (MEC) holds tremendous potential to solve the energy crisis and mitigate the greenhouse gas emissions. However, the membrane fouling is still a big challenge for CO2 bioelectromethanosynthesis owing to the poor proton diffusion across membrane and high inter-resistance. In this study, a new MEC bioreactor with biogas recirculation unit was designed in the cathode chamber to enhance secondary-dissolution of CO2 while mitigating the contaminant adhesion on membrane surface. Biogas recirculation improved CO2 re-dissolution, reduced concentration polarization, and facilitated the proton transmembrane diffusion. This resulted in a remarkable increase in the cathodic methane production rate from 0.4 mL/L·d to 8.5 mL/L·d. A robust syntrophic relationship between anodic organic-degrading bacteria (Firmicutes 5.29%, Bacteroidetes 25.90%, and Proteobacteria 6.08%) and cathodic methane-producing archaea (Methanobacterium 65.58%) enabled simultaneous organic degradation, high CO2 bioelectromethanosynthesis, and renewable energy storage.

Original languageEnglish
Article number142119
JournalChemosphere
Volume358
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2024

Keywords

  • Bioelectromethanosynthesis
  • Electroactive microbes
  • Extracellular electron transfer
  • Microbial electrolysis cell
  • e/H donor

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