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Flame synthesis of carbon nanostructures on...
Journal article

Flame synthesis of carbon nanostructures on stainless steel anodes for use in microbial fuel cells

Abstract

Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) offer a promising alternative energy technology, but suffer from low power densities which hinder their practical applicability. In order to improve anodic power density, we deposited carbon nanostructures (CNSs) on an otherwise plain stainless steel mesh (SS-M) anode. Using a flame synthesis method that did not require pretreatment of SS-M substrates, we were able to produce these novel CNS-enhanced SS-M (CNS-M) anodes quickly (in a matter of minutes) and inexpensively, without the added costs of chemical pretreatments. During fed batch experiments with biomass from anaerobic digesters in single-chamber MFCs, the median power densities (based on the projected anodic surface area) were 2.9mWm−2 and 187mWm−2 for MFCs with SS-M and CNS-M anodes, respectively. The addition of CNSs to a plain SS-M anode via flame deposition therefore resulted in a 60-fold increase in the median power production. The combination of CNSs and metallic current collectors holds considerable promise for power production in MFCs.

Authors

Lamp JL; Guest JS; Naha S; Radavich KA; Love NG; Ellis MW; Puri IK

Journal

Journal of Power Sources, Vol. 196, No. 14, pp. 5829–5834

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

July 15, 2011

DOI

10.1016/j.jpowsour.2011.02.077

ISSN

0378-7753

Labels

Fields of Research (FoR)

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

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