The
combination of beer, wastewater, microbes, fuel cells, high school students
and teachers sounds like a witches' brew for an old-fashioned, illicit
'60s beach party.
Lars Angenent, Ph.D. has devloped
a microbial fuel cell that uses waste water to create electricity. Angenent
discusses his research and how a grant from the National Science Foundation
is helping him spread his research to high school students.
Instead, these are the components
that comprise the heart and soul of a new high school science curriculum
being developed by researchers at Washington University in St. Louis and
a couple of St. Louis area high school teachers.
Lars Angenent, Ph.D., assistant professor
of energy, environmental & chemical engineering, has received a $400,000
Career grant from the National Science Foundation to develop microbial
fuel cell (MFC) kits and an accompanying booklet of physics, chemistry
and biology lessons that pertain to the cell. In addition, Angenent will
make the kits available to high school science teachers everywhere as an
exciting, visual, hands-on way to teach science. As part of the grant,
he will be working with Victoria L. May, assistant dean for science outreach
in Arts & Sciences and director of the university's Science Outreach
program.
Using MFC technology, Angenent is
treating wastewater donated by local brewery Anheuser-Busch, and in so
doing creating electricity in a six-liter device a bit bigger than a large
thermos. He uses a mixed medium containing thousands of organisms and optimizes
environmental conditions to select for a bacterial community with improved
electron transfer in anode biofilms, thereby increasing the electron transfer
rate. In addition, he plans to work with a single-culture biofilm to allow
a full understanding of how to use operating conditions to manipulate electron
transfer in anode chambers.
"Anheuser-Busch is supporting us
not with money, but with wastewater, of which they have an ample supply,"
said Angenent. "They're very happy to be working with us because they have
a keen interest in biofuels and bioenergy.
"As a teaching tool, the MFC can
enable the teaching of physics, chemistry and biology, all the while making
the science exciting. Students will actually be able to see the electricity
their MFC is creating. If their MFC is being fed bacteria and sugars correctly,
it will turn a light-emitting diode on. Imagine the excitement of that."
Angenent said that MFC technology
offers advantages for converting waste to energy because the microbial
fuel cells can operate using the dilute organic waste streams typical of
domestic wastewater treatment plants and at low temperatures.
Angenent uses a carbon-based fiber
on which biofilm grows, allowing him to connect two electrodes in the anode
and cathode chambers with a conductive wire.
In a hydrogen fuel cell, a membrane
separates the anode and cathode chambers. When hydrogen meets the anode
electrode, it splits into protons and electrons, sending protons across
the membrane to the cathode chamber and sending electrons over the wire
between electrodes to create a current.
Oxygen is added to the cathode chamber,
and on the electrode there is a reaction of electron proton and oxygen
to form water. Catalysts, such as platinum, are needed on both electrodes
to promote the reactions.
"We are doing basically the same
thing as is done in a hydrogen fuel cell with our microbial fuel cell,"
Angenent said. "We've found that the bacteria on the anode electrode can
act as the catalyst instead of platinum."
With the Career grant funding Angenent
intends to advance the conversion to electricity by predicting the power
output of various configurations of microbial fuel cells, by determining
the selection process for the microbial community in the cathode thereby
enhancing the electron flow. He also wants to understand how operating
conditions can affect the biofilm at the anode.
The research will be integrated with
an educational component that will engage students from St. Louis' Hazelwood
school district and encourage them to consider careers in science and engineering.
The educational component will include
development of two new courses. One will be in bioprocess engineering for
undergraduate and graduate students and will focus on how to transform
waste into useful products. The second will be a molecular biology techniques
laboratory class.
In addition to development of the
two new courses, a program that engages high school students in the science
and engineering of microbial fuel cells has been established. Erin Roades
and Brett Barron, both chemistry and biology teachers at Hazelwood Central
High, are working on the MFC kits, having begun work this past summer on
them. They will bring their classes of between 100 and 120 students onto
campus once or twice an academic year to teach them using MFC lessons.
Over the next two summers, Roades and Barron will compile a curriculum
with the MFC as the centerpiece.
The lab classes will be conducted
on the university campus, providing high school students from underachieving
schools to visit and learn about the opportunities in higher education
as well as to do hands-on learning, Angenent said. With the experience
from the on-campus classes, kits will be developed that will allow extension
of the hands-on learning to other high schools.
"We want to make the kits and curriculum
available to a larger network beyond our Outreach connections," Angenent
said. "This way a rural school miles away from a university can still use
the kits and concepts."
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