Using sewage sludge pyrolytic gas to modify titanium alloy to obtain high-performance anodes in bio-electrochemical systems

Titanium is under consideration as a potential stable bio-anode because of its high conductivity, suitable mechanical properties, and electrochemical inertness in the operating potential window of bio-electrochemical systems; however, its application is limited by its poor electron-transfer capacity...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of power sources Vol. 372; pp. 38 - 45
Main Authors Gu, Yuan, Ying, Kang, Shen, Dongsheng, Huang, Lijie, Ying, Xianbin, Huang, Haoqian, Cheng, Kun, Chen, Jiazheng, Zhou, Yuyang, Chen, Ting, Feng, Huajun
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 31.12.2017
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Summary:Titanium is under consideration as a potential stable bio-anode because of its high conductivity, suitable mechanical properties, and electrochemical inertness in the operating potential window of bio-electrochemical systems; however, its application is limited by its poor electron-transfer capacity with electroactive bacteria and weak ability to form biofilms on its hydrophobic surface. This study reports an effective and low-cost way to convert a hydrophobic titanium alloy surface into a hydrophilic surface that can be used as a bio-electrode with higher electron-transfer rates. Pyrolytic gas of sewage sludge is used to modify the titanium alloy. The current generation, anodic biofilm formation surface, and hydrophobicity are systematically investigated by comparing bare electrodes with three modified electrodes. Maximum current density (15.80 A/m2), achieved using a modified electrode, is 316-fold higher than that of the bare titanium alloy electrode (0.05 A/m2) and that achieved by titanium alloy electrodes modified by other methods (12.70 A/m2). The pyrolytic gas-modified titanium alloy electrode can be used as a high-performance and scalable bio-anode for bio-electrochemical systems because of its high electron-transfer rates, hydrophilic nature, and ability to achieve high current density. •Sludge pyrolysis gas modification used to improve titanium alloy hydrophilicity.•Modified titanium electrodes accelerated biofilm formation.•Modified electrode current density was 316-fold higher than that of bare electrode.•New method proposed to dispose of sewage sludge.
ISSN:0378-7753
1873-2755
DOI:10.1016/j.jpowsour.2017.10.073