Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
186839 Electrochimica Acta 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Plasma pre-treatment of electrodes produces chemical modifications at surface level.•Nitrogen and plasma treatment were studied before inoculation with a mixed microbial consortia.•Plasma treatment accelerates the current development in microbial bio-electrochemical systems.•Plasma enhances the initial attachment of cells.•After treatment, a mature electroactive biofilm is developed in half the time as blank electrodes.

Surface modifications of electrode materials are important for improved performance of microbial bio-electrochemical systems. Here, we studied the effect of pre-treating both glassy carbon and graphite felt electrodes with either an oxygen or a nitrogen plasma before reactor inoculation with a mixed microbial consortia. The plasma produces chemical modifications at the electrode surface level. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and water contact angle analysis showed that the plasma removes surface contamination, produces ion implantation and renders the hydrophobic surfaces highly hydrophilic. Plasma pre-treatment considerably accelerated the generation of a bio-electrochemical anodic current after inoculation. Nitrogen plasma pre-treatment yielded the best performance, followed closely by oxygen plasma. Plasma pre-treated electrodes reached a plateau of maximum current density twice as fast as untreated electrodes. Analysis of the current development profiles suggests that the plasma pre-treatment is neither producing a preferential attachment of certain types of bacteria over others nor accelerating the extracellular electron transfer rate. The results indicate that the plasma treatment considerably enhances the initial cell adhesion, which results in subsequently faster biofilm development. Plasma pre-treatment of electrodes is an inexpensive, fast, safe and straightforward technique to achieve more rapid start-up of bio-electrochemical processes.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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