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 ARS microbiologist
Mike Cotta and Washington University scientists are collaborating on a hydrogen
fuel project that relies on sugar-eating bacteria that can survive without
oxygen inside fuel cells. Above, Cotta examines samples from an earlier study
involving anaerobic bacteria in livestock waste. Click the image for more
information about it.
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Microbes Plus Sugars Equals Hydrogen Fuel?
By Jan
Suszkiw October 25, 2007
Wanted: Bacterium that can eat sugar or sludge; must be team
player or electrochemically active; ability to survive without oxygen, a plus.
Thus might read the bacterial "job description" posted by Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) and Washington University
(WU) scientists, who are collaborating on
ways to make microbial fuel cells more efficient and practical.
According to
Mike
Cotta, who leads the ARS
Fermentation
Biotechnology Research Unit, Peoria, Ill., the project with WU arose from a
mutual interest in developing sustainable methods of producing energy that
could diminish U.S. reliance on crude oil.
Cotta's team specializes in using bacteria, yeasts or other
microorganisms inside bioreactors to do work, such as ferment grain sugars into
fuel ethanol. At WU in St. Louis, Mo., assistant professor Lars Angenent is
investigating fuel cell systems that use mixtures of bacteria to treat organic
wastewater and catalyze the release of electrons and protons, which then can be
used to produce electricity or hydrogen fuel.
In September 2006, the researchers pooled their labs' resources and
expertise to undertake a three-year cooperative project. One resource they'll
share is the ARS Peoria-based Microbial Culture Collection, which houses about
87,000 accessions of freeze-dried microbes from around the world.
Using the collection's database information, the team is searching for
microbes that "eat" biomass sugars (e.g., glucose and xylose from corn stover)
and are electrochemically active. That means they can transfer electrons from
fuel cell sugars without help from costly chemicals called mediators. The
electrons, after traveling a circuit, combine with protons in a cathode
chamber, forming hydrogen, which can be burned or converted into electricity.
Bacteroides and Shewanella are among bacteria species
used to start the process.
Hydrogen's appeal stems from its natural abundance and capacity to
store and release energy in a nonpolluting manner. The challenge is
commercially producing it from sources other than fossil fuels, which are in
limited supply and nonrenewable. About 95 percent of U.S. hydrogen comes from
petroleum or natural gas via a process called steam reforming.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.