info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Urine dilution boosts the electricity production in bio-electrochemical systems powered by un-pretreated human urine
Fecha
2021-02Registro en:
Prudente, Mariano; Massazza, Diego Ariel; Busalmen, Juan Pablo; Romeo, Hernan Esteban; Urine dilution boosts the electricity production in bio-electrochemical systems powered by un-pretreated human urine; Elsevier Science SA; Bioelectrochemistry; 137; 2-2021; 1-8
1567-5394
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Prudente, Mariano
Massazza, Diego Ariel
Busalmen, Juan Pablo
Romeo, Hernan Esteban
Resumen
Human urine can be turned into electricity in bio-electrochemical systems. The acclimation of electro-active bacteria to culture media with increasing urine concentrations has led to raising the obtained current densities, which typically followed a Monod-like evolution profile as a function of urine concentration. However, the acclimation protocol has been so far evaluated using pretreated urine samples (fermented or precipitated), not raw (un-pretreated) urine. We demonstrate that, when un-pretreated urine is used, the microbial adaptation to increasingly concentrated urine leads to a current density profile that does not reach a saturation-like phase, but follows a Han/Levenspiel-type trend (bell-shaped). By diluting un-pretreated urine to concentrations matching those of the maximum in the Han/Levenspiel-like current profile (15–20% v/v) it is possible to avoid the drop in the electro-active response, generating anodic current densities as high as 3.6 ± 0.2 A.m−2 (per actual surface area), 35-fold higher than those reached in pure un-pretreated urine.