Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5144994 | Bioelectrochemistry | 2017 | 28 Pages |
Abstract
Among others, Clostridia are believed to represent electroactive microbes being highly promising for microbial electrosynthesis. We investigated the potential steps and challenges for the bio-electrochemical fermentation (electro-fermentation) of mid-chain organic acids using Clostridium kluyveri. Starting from a metabolic model the potential limitations of the metabolism as well as beneficial scenarios for electrochemical stimulation were identified and experimentally investigated. C. kluyveri was shown to not be able to exchange electrons with an electrode directly. Therefore, exogenous mediators (2-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone, potassium ferrocyanide, neutral red, methyl viologen, methylene blue, and the macrocyclic cobalt hexaamine [Co(trans-diammac)]3Â +) were tested for their toxicity and electro-fermentations were performed in 1Â L bioreactors covering 38 biotic and 8 abiotic runs. When using C. kluyveri and mediators, maximum absolute current densities higher than the abiotic controls were detected for all runs. At the same time, no significant impact on the cell metabolism (product formation, carbon recovery, growth rate) was found. From this observation, we deduce general potential limitations of electro-fermentations with C. kluyveri and discuss strategies to successfully overcome them.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Electrochemistry
Authors
Christin Koch, Anne Kuchenbuch, Frauke Kracke, Paul V. Bernhardt, Jens Krömer, Falk Harnisch,