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Microbial energy conversion and practical application to an algal fuel cell. Peter Weigele MIT Biology and Edgerton Center Presentation for 10.391 Sustainable Energy February 15, 2007 Department of Biology http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/ Food and fuel subject to the same market forces? A Culinary and Cultural Staple in Crisis: Mexico Grapples With Soaring Prices for Corn -- and Tortillas By Manuel Roig-Franzia Washington Post Foreign Service Saturday, January 27, 2007; A01 “Mexico is in the grip of the worst tortilla crisis in its modern history. Dramatically rising international corn prices, spurred by demand for the grain-based fuel ethanol, have led to expensive tortillas.” 9 x 109 by 2050 respiration! Electrons go where they are most wanted... Aerobic respiration: O2 as terminal electron acceptor “Bacteria are beautiful” by Diane Newman Anaerobic respiration with Iron(III) as extracellular terminal e- acceptor soluble electron carriers “Bacteria are beautiful” by Diane Newman see also www.geobacter.org Protein nanowires also found in gram negative aerobes, cyanobacteria, and methanogens http://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0604517103 Schematic of a microbial fuel cell Sediment battery: a type of microbial fuel cell Bacterial biomass from electricity Summary, part I: The microbial fuel cell could be a core technology for energy conversion cellulose-derived carbohydrates energy rich wastewater organic sediments sunlight electricity MFC microbial metabolism ex vivo protein complexes anode/cathode composition electron carriers fuel cell construction electricity hydrogen alcohols methane treated water Part II: Photosynthesis QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. NADPH stroma light 1 H+ 2 3 Q cyt bf complex OEC thylakoid lumen ADP + Pi ATP light FNR F1F0 ATP- Fd synthase Light photoHarvesting Complex system II (LHCII) (P680) 2 H2O NADP+ Light photoHarvesting system I Complex (P700) (LHCI) PC 4 H+ + O2 H+ 4 H+ 5 H+ 1 2 3 4 5 Part III: A simple, low-cost algal fuel cell for research and education Chlamydomonas rheinhardtii making colonies on solid medium Photobioreactors: modular, scalable Algal growth using an airlift bioreactor Gas Dispersion Tube Only Airlift with Gas Dispersion Tube PVC insert to create air-lift for improved mixing PVC tubing + caps + fittings + tubing + pump = gas recirculator The finished recirculating pump Gas managment and fuel cell Luer fittings and stopcocks fromCole-Parmer petstore 40 bucks from fuelcellstore.com Bioreactor setup Fuel cell under load Photobioreactor H2 Fuel Cell e- Online Data Monitoring Data collection using an A/D converter Dataq model 154, ~$100, microvolt resolution Experimental overview algal growth on solid substrate grow algae with bubbling air and S+ medium inoculate large bioreactor containing S- medium seal, start pump, and collect data measure cell mass, and chlorophyll concentration Do other kinds of green, microalgae make H2? Chlamydomonas rheinhardtii Unknown: “WP2” Unknown: “WP1” Testing different algal strains (note clumping Chlamy) Algal strain choice impacts H2 production: As Indicated by Varying Voltage Output data from 10.28 Team C, 2006 data from 10.28 Team C, 2006 10.28 Team C Sohrab Virk Asish Misra Joia Ramachandani Sophmore biology students from Nashoba Regional HS Kay Leigh Kay Andrew Hoy Mackey Craven Many, many thanks! Nina Kshetry Sam Jewell Tom Knight Jon King Chris Kaiser Samantha Sutton Jason Kelly openwetware.org J.F. Hamel and 10.28 Team C Joia Ramachandani Asish Misra Sohrab Virk David Form, NRHS Ashley, Meaghan, Kay Leigh, Jackie, and Kay Edgerton Center Steven Banzaert Sandi Lipnonski New blood! John M. Craven Andrew Hoy 6 CO2 + 6 H2O --> C6H12O6 Marine Synechococcus Marine Synechococcus: a gram negative bacterium performing oxygenic photosynthesis. Hill-billy photobioreactor Syn9 host: Synechococcus WH8109 contractile tail 177,300 bp 225 orfs 200 nm