Bioelectricity and CO2-to-butyrate production using photobioelectrochemical cells with bio-hydrogel

Bioresour Technol. 2024 Apr:398:130530. doi: 10.1016/j.biortech.2024.130530. Epub 2024 Mar 4.

Abstract

Bio-photoelectrochemical cell (BPEC) is an emerging technology that can convert the solar energy into electricity or chemicals. However, traditional BPEC depending on abiotic electrodes is challenging for microbial/enzymatic catalysis because of the inefficient electron exchange. Here, electroactive bacteria (Shewanella loihica PV-4) were used to reduce graphene oxide (rGO) nanosheets and produce co-assembled rGO/Shewanella biohydrogel as a basic electrode. By adsorbing chlorophyll contained thylakoid membrane, this biohydrogel was fabricated as a photoanode that delivered maximum photocurrent 126 μA/cm3 under visible light. Impressively, the biohydrogel could be served as a cathode in BPEC by forming coculture system with genetically edited Clostridium ljungdahlii. Under illumination, the BPEC with above photoanode and cathode yielded ∼ 5.4 mM butyrate from CO2 reduction, 169 % increase compared to dark process. This work provided a new strategy (nanotechnology combined with synthetic biology) to achieve efficient bioelectricity and valuable chemical production in PBEC.

Keywords: Bioelectrochemical system; Biohybrid; CO(2)-to-butyrate; Microbial electrosynthesis; Photoanode.

MeSH terms

  • Bioelectric Energy Sources*
  • Butyrates
  • Carbon Dioxide* / metabolism
  • Electricity
  • Electrodes
  • Graphite*
  • Hydrogels
  • Light

Substances

  • Carbon Dioxide
  • Butyrates
  • Hydrogels
  • graphene oxide
  • Graphite