By Holly Wagner, Ohio State University (August
21, 2007)
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Cows could one day help to meet the rise in
demand for alternative energy sources, say Ohio State University researchers
that used microbe-rich fluid from a cow to generate electricity in a small fuel
cell.
This new microbial fuel cell is a redesign of a larger model
that the researchers created a few years ago. The new cell is a quarter of the
size of the original model, yet can produce about three times the power, said
Hamid Rismani-Yazdi, a doctoral student
in food, agricultural and biological engineering at Ohio State University.

Hamid
Rismani-Yazdi
Experiments showed that it took two of the new cells to
produce enough electricity to recharge a AA-sized battery. It took four of the
first-generation fuel cells to recharge just one of these batteries.
Rismani-Yazdi is the lead author of a new study of
cellulose-based microbial fuel cells. The source of power for these fuel cells
comes from the breakdown of cellulose by a variety of bacteria in rumen fluid,
the microbe-rich fluid found in a cow's rumen, the largest chamber of a cow's
stomach. To create power, researchers fill one compartment of a microbial fuel
cell with cellulose and rumen fluid.
“Energy is produced as the bacteria break down cellulose,
which is one of the most abundant resources on our planet,” said Rismani-Yazdi.
Indeed, cellulose is plentiful on most farms, as harvesting usually leaves
plenty behind in the form of crop residue in fields. Other prime sources of
cellulose include waste paper and items made of wood.
Rismani-Yazdi and his colleagues are continuing to refine
their microbial fuel cells, as well as trying to figure out how to grow mass
amounts of rumen microbes in the laboratory for possible large-scale use in the
future.
The researchers reported the findings August 21 at the
American Chemical Society meeting in Boston. Rismani-Yazdi worked with his mentor Ann
Christy, an associate professor of food,
agricultural and biological engineering at Ohio State and with Olli Tuovinen, a professor of
microbiology at the university.
The team collected rumen fluid from a living cow, extracting
the fluid through a cannula, a surgically implanted porthole that leads directly
into its rumen. They filled one compartment of a fuel cell with this
microbe-rich fluid and with cellulose.
The microbial fuel cell, which has two compartments, is
about two inches wide and three inches in height and length. A thin membrane
made of special material separates the two compartments. This material allows
protons to move from the negative (anode) compartment into the positive
(cathode) compartment.
This movement of protons, along with the movement of
electrons across the wire and resistor that connect the two compartments,
creates an electrical current.
A small piece of graphite placed inside each compartment
served as a fuel cell's electrodes (an electrode draws and emits electrical
charge.) The researchers filled the anode chamber with cellulose and with
microbes derived from rumen fluid. Electrons are released as the microorganisms
break down the cellulose.
These electrons are then transferred to the anode
electrode.

The researchers filled the other chamber, the cathode,
with potassium ferricyanide, a chemical that acts as an oxidizing agent and
helps close the electrical circuit by accepting electrons from the cathode
electrode. Once the circuit is closed, electrons flow from the anode to the
cathode, creating electricity.
The microbial fuel cells with the least amount of resistance
produced the most power – enough to run a miniature Christmas tree light bulb,
Christy said. That's about three times more power than their first-generation
fuel cells were capable of producing.
“The amount of electricity that we can get out of one of
these cells is ultimately related to the resistance of the object that we want
to power,” Rismani-Yazdi said.
He said that he typically adds cellulose to the fuel cells
every two days, although that amount can vary depending on how quickly power is
drained from the cell.
“But the power output of these fuel cells is sustainable
indefinitely as long as we keep feeding the bacteria with cellulose,” Christy
said. “We ran these cells for three months.”
Although the technology is still in its infancy, the
researchers are encouraged by how far they've come in the last two years, and
they are continuing their efforts to increase the amount of power these
microbial fuel cells can produce.
Partial support for this work was provided by the Ohio Agricultural
Research and Development Center as well as the
College of Food,
Agricultural and Environmental Sciences at Ohio
State.
Contact:
Hamid Rismani-Yazdi: Rismani-Yazdi.1@osu.edu
Ann Christy: Christy.14@osu.edu