Abstract
AbstractA black precipitate produced by a sulfate reducing bacteriumCupidesulfovibriosp. strain HK was investigated with multidisciplinary methods. X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis revealed that the black precipitate was mackinawite. Cyclic voltammetry analysis showed the obvious redox peaks, and the biogenic mackinawite exhibited rechargeable properties. XRD analyses showed that the form of the rechargeable biogenic mackinawite (RBM-II) was changed by discharge and recharge treatments: Field-emission transmission electron microscope analyses revealed that lepidocrocite and amorphous iron oxide were appeared from mackinawite on discharged condition, and the three kinds of minerals were intermingled via the rechargeable treatments. Physicochemical parameters were changed regularly under the treatments, suggesting that discharge would be occurred by iron oxidation and sulfur reduction, andvice versa. These results indicated that dynamics of sulfur is important key process in rechargeable mechanism, supporting that a part of mackinawite was transformed to lepidocrocite and iron oxides, andvice versa. Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) equipped with lactate, strain HK-II and anode including RBM-II consumed lactate even under opened circuit conditions, after which MFCs generated higher current density at re-closed circuit conditions. These results demonstrated that the biogenic mackinawite is one of rechargeable materials and would play important roles in geomicrobiological reactions and biotechnology.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory