http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2004/18may_wastenot.htm?list1119125

On a two-year trip to Mars, according to one estimate, a crew of six
humans will generate more than six tons of solid organic waste--much
of it feces. So what do you do with all that?
Right now, astronaut waste gets shipped back to Earth. But for
long-term exploration, you'd want to recycle it, because it holds
resources that astronauts will need. It will provide pure drinking
water. It will provide fertilizer. And, with the help of a recently
discovered microbe, it will also provide electricity.

Like many bacteria, this one, a member of the Geobacteraceae family,
feeds on, and can decompose, organic material. Geobacter microbes were
first discovered in the muck of the Potomac River in 1987; they like
to live in places where there's no oxygen and plenty of iron. They
also have the unexpected ability to move electrons into metal. That
means that under the right conditions, Geobacter microbes can both
process waste and generate electricity.

The "right conditions" might be found in a new type of fuel cell--a
membrane microbial fuel cell. This device is currently being developed
by a NASA-funded research team led by Dr. Bruce Rittmann, a professor
at Northwestern University.

All fuel cells generate electricity by producing and controlling a
flow of electrons. Conventional cells, including ones used onboard the
space shuttle and in some prototype automobiles, obtain the electrons
for their electron flow by pulling them off of hydrogen atoms. In
order to do that, these fuel cells must be given a constant supply of
hydrogen.

Microbial fuel cells obtain their electrons, instead, from organic
waste. The bacteria at the heart of the device feed on the waste, and,
as part of their digestive process, they pull electrons from the waste
material. Geobacter microbes, as well as a few other types, can be
coaxed to deliver these electrons directly to a fuel cell electrode,
which conducts them into a circuit -- a wire, for example. As they
flow through the circuit, they generate electricity.

Microbial fuel cells are already being experimented with on Earth. For
example, one prototype is being used at Pennsylvania State University
to generate electricity as it purifies domestic wastewater.

To make this idea practical for space travel, says Rittmann, you have
to have "a very efficient, very compact configuration." The fuel cell
can't take up much room. To meet this requirement, Rittmann is
considering a fuel cell of tightly packed fibers, each one of which
will be a fuel cell all by itself.

Each fiber would consist of three layers, like three straws, one
inside of another. Each layer corresponds to one of the layers of a
fuel cell: the anode (outer), the electrolyte-membrane (middle), and
the cathode (inner). A slurry of liquefied waste would be pumped past
the outer layers where Geobacter microbes (or other similar bacteria)
can grab electrons and move them to the anode, into the circuit, and
then to the cathode.

Before any such designs can be put into practice, however, Rittmann
and his team must first decipher the exact mechanism by which the
bacterium transfers electrons to the electrode. In laboratory tests so
far, the transfer rate is too slow. "We need to know how we can make
that faster," Rittmann says, "and so generate more power."

He has a couple of ideas about what the holdup might be. "The electron
actually has to move from the outer surface of the microbe to the
electrode, and it could be that it's limited by physical contact."
Even though the bacteria lives attached on the surface of the anode,
only a tiny bit of each microbe actually touches the metal, and that
may be hindering electron movement.

Another factor is the voltage on the electrode. It has to be high
enough to coax the microbes into giving up their electrons. "Microbes
move electrons around in order to gain energy. In fact, they only move
the electrons when they do gain energy," he explains. What's the best
voltage? "That's one of the questions we're trying to answer."

"Let's say, for example, that the total voltage difference between the
fuel and the anode is 2 volts. Then the microorganisms, as they give
up their electrons, might take 0.5 volts to sustain themselves,
leaving 1.5 volts for doing work in the circuit. These are just
made-up numbers," says Rittmann, "but they illustrate what we are
trying to learn."

The membrane microbial fuel cell is still in the early stages of its
development. Yet, if the project succeeds, we may find these devices
not only in space, but also in our own homes. After all, astronauts
aren't the only ones that produce organic waste.

"You have to treat the wastes anyway," points out Rittmann. "So why
not make the process an energy gainer, instead of an energy loser? By
producing electricity, microbial fuel cells would make the process of
purifying waste streams much more economical."

Moreover, he says, "they change our focus. Microbial fuel cells
transform something we think of as undesirable into a resource."

Waste? Maybe not....



xponent

Everybody's Doing It Maru

rob


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