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Details of Grant 

EPSRC Reference: EP/R041644/2
Title: Harnessing free energy - the microbial way
Principal Investigator: Dolfing, Dr J
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Department: Fac of Engineering and Environment
Organisation: Northumbria, University of
Scheme: Standard Research - NR1
Starts: 31 July 2020 Ends: 16 June 2021 Value (£): 31,945
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Water Engineering
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
Water
Related Grants:
Panel History:  
Summary on Grant Application Form
There is an urgent need to make the water industry more sustainable. Currently water companies consume 3% of all electricity produced in the UK. Half of this energy is used for aeration of the activated sludge systems that have served the industry for a century, but are no longer deemed sustainable. Modern bioelectrochemical methods hold great promise as alternative, more sustainable wastewater treatment methods. Avoiding the energy intensive and expensive aeration step these technologies use the internal chemical energy present in the wastewater to produce electricity or biofuels such as hydrogen gas. However, the current generation of bioelectrochemical systems is still in its infancy; the energy recovery of these systems is notoriously inefficient.

My bright IDEA is that a thermodynamic analysis of the various steps inherent to microbial electrolysis and microbial fuel cells has unexpectedly and counterintuitively revealed that the reactions at the anode of these systems are exergonic yet endothermic. This has apparently never been calculated before, but opens up the vista to harvest the energy/heat flow associated with the anodic reaction. The microbial processes occurring at the anode take up heat. The aim of the proposed research is to confirm experimentally that this flow is as significantly as my calculations predict, and then develop a method to harvest this energy. The IDEA is to use thermoelectric materials, semiconductor solids that produce electric current when joined together and subjected to temperature differences across the junction. The concept is not just "bright", the technology that it will spurn has the potential for a step change in the water industry and beyond. In the water industry it may/will be the breakthrough that ushers in a new era of energy efficient bioelectrochemical wastewater treatment methods. Beyond, the concept will open up similar opportunities in other branches of green biotechnology. And further afield, in the chemical industry, the concept to harvest energy from exergonic yet endothermic process steps will have analogous applications. The bright IDEA research proposed here aims to provide the proof of principle for these developments. We will protect the iIDEA with a patent.
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