Published October 15, 2014 | Version v1
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Influence of Acidic pH on Hydrogen and Acetate Production by an Electrosynthetic Microbiome

  • 1. Medical University of South Carolina
  • 2. Argonne National Laboratory
  • 3. University of Chicago

Description

Production of hydrogen and organic compounds by an electrosynthetic microbiome using electrodes and carbon dioxide as sole electron donor and carbon source, respectively, was examined after exposure to acidic pH (∼5). Hydrogen production by biocathodes poised at −600 mV vs. SHE increased>100-fold and acetate production ceased at acidic pH, but ∼5–15 mM (catholyte volume)/day acetate and>1,000 mM/day hydrogen were attained at pH ∼6.5 following repeated exposure to acidic pH. Cyclic voltammetry revealed a 250 mV decrease in hydrogen overpotential and a maximum current density of 12.2 mA/cm2 at −765 mV (0.065 mA/cm2 sterile control at −800 mV) by the Acetobacterium-dominated community. Supplying −800 mV to the microbiome after repeated exposure to acidic pH resulted in up to 2.6 kg/m3/day hydrogen (≈2.6 gallons gasoline equivalent), 0.7 kg/m3/day formate, and 3.1 kg/m3/day acetate ( = 4.7 kg CO2 captured).

Data availability

The authors confirm that all data underlying the findings are fully available without restriction. The sequence data referred to in the manuscript are now freely available to the public on MG-RAST under Project Electrohydrogenesis Microbiomes: Reactor 4electrode (4562455.3) and Reactor 4supernatant (4562456.3). Additional data files are available in the Supporting Information.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0109935
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10803

Funding

Department of Energy
Advanced Projects Research Agency – Energy
Argonne National Laboratory
Director's Postdoctoral Fellowship

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution