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Nanoscale membranes that chemically isolate and electronically wire up the abiotic/biotic interface

Author

Listed:
  • Jose A. Cornejo

    (University of California)

  • Hua Sheng

    (University of California)

  • Eran Edri

    (University of California
    Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Be’er Sheva)

  • Caroline Ajo-Franklin

    (University of California
    University of California)

  • Heinz Frei

    (University of California)

Abstract

By electrochemically coupling microbial and abiotic catalysts, bioelectrochemical systems such as microbial electrolysis cells and microbial electrosynthesis systems synthesize energy-rich chemicals from energy-poor precursors with unmatched efficiency. However, to circumvent chemical incompatibilities between the microbial cells and inorganic materials that result in toxicity, corrosion, fouling, and efficiency-degrading cross-reactions between oxidation and reduction environments, bioelectrochemical systems physically separate the microbial and inorganic catalysts by macroscopic distances, thus introducing ohmic losses, rendering these systems impractical at scale. Here we electrochemically couple an inorganic catalyst, a SnO2 anode, with a microbial catalyst, Shewanella oneidensis, via a 2-nm-thick silica membrane containing -CN and -NO2 functionalized p-oligo(phenylene vinylene) molecular wires. This membrane enables electron flow at 0.51 μA cm−2 from microbial catalysts to the inorganic anode, while blocking small molecule transport. Thus the modular architecture avoids chemical incompatibilities without ohmic losses and introduces an immense design space for scale up of bioelectrochemical systems.

Suggested Citation

  • Jose A. Cornejo & Hua Sheng & Eran Edri & Caroline Ajo-Franklin & Heinz Frei, 2018. "Nanoscale membranes that chemically isolate and electronically wire up the abiotic/biotic interface," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 9(1), pages 1-8, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:9:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-018-04707-6
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04707-6
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    Cited by:

    1. Pan, Qin & Tian, Xiaochun & Li, Junpeng & Wu, Xuee & Zhao, Feng, 2021. "Interfacial electron transfer for carbon dioxide valorization in hybrid inorganic-microbial systems," Applied Energy, Elsevier, vol. 292(C).

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