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Sewage sludge-derived carbon-doped manganese as efficient cathode catalysts in microbial fuel cells
Author(s) -
Jingjing Huang,
Huajun Feng,
Yufeng Jia,
Dongsheng Shen,
Yingfeng Xu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
water science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1996-9732
pISSN - 0273-1223
DOI - 10.2166/wst.2019.344
Subject(s) - microbial fuel cell , catalysis , cathode , materials science , sewage sludge , carbon fibers , chemical engineering , power density , waste management , sewage treatment , chemistry , organic chemistry , electrode , composite material , power (physics) , physics , quantum mechanics , composite number , anode , engineering
Searching for efficient and inexpensive catalysts to replace precious metal-based catalyst in air-cathode microbial fuel cells is crucial for the practical application and commercialization in wastewater treatment and energy generation. Here, through a simple pyrolysis process, sewage sludge could be converted into carbon material with hierarchically porous structure, which demonstrates oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) catalytic performance. Subsequently, co-doping Mn and N species on the carbonized sewage sludge matrix could further improve the ORR catalytic performance, which even demonstrates comparable performance to the commercial expensive Pt/C catalyst in air-cathode microbial fuels cells (MFC). The highest maximum power density of MFC with Mn-N/SC air-cathode is as high as 1,120 mW m -2 , which is similar to the power density of the air-cathode MFC equipped commercialized Pt/C catalyst (1,240 mW m -2 ). Considering the simple operation, significant cost-saving and easy scale-up of the proposed 'trash-to-treasure' method, it is promising to convert harmful sewage sludge into efficient non-platinum cathode catalysts in microbial fuel cells.

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