Voltage reversal during microbial fuel cell stack operation
By Oh, S.-E. & Logan, B.E.
Published in Journal of Power Sources
2007
Abstract
Microbial fuel cells (MFC) can be used to directly generate electricity from organic matter, but the voltage produced by a single reactor is only ∼0.5 V. Voltage can be increased by stacking cells, i.e. by linking individual reactors in series, as is commonly done with hydrogen fuel cells, to provide a higher voltage output. A two-cell air-cathode MFC stack tested here produced a working voltage of 0.9 V (external load 500 Ω) and had an open circuit voltage (OCV) of 1.3 V when operated in fed batch mode under substrate-sufficient conditions. When multiple cells are stacked together, however, charge reversal can result in the reverse polarity of one or more cells and a loss of power generation. We investigated the causes of charge reversal and the impact of prolonged reversal on power generation using a two air-cathode MFCs stack. When voltage began to decline at the end of a fed batch cycle, we observed voltage reversal with one cell producing a working voltage of 0.6 V, and the other cell having a reversed voltage of -0.58 V, producing only a minimal stack voltage of 0.02 V. The reason for the voltage reversal was shown to be fuel starvation, resulting in a loss of bacterial activity. Voltage reversal adversely affected bacteria on the anode of the affected cell, as shown by a relative decrease in cell performance following a cycle of starvation (no feeding). The control of voltage reversal will be crucial for long-term operation of MFCs in series. Rapid feeding of a cell can restore positive voltage generation, but the long-term impact of charge reversal will be inactivation of bacteria and it will require that the affected cells be short-circuited to maintain stack power production. A better understanding of the long term effects of voltage reversal on power generation by MFC stacks is needed in order to efficiently increase voltage production by using stacked MFC systems.