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Semiconducting Single Wall Carbon Nanotubes as Artificial Pili for Enhanced CO 2 Clostridium ljungdahlii Biofilms

42 Pages Posted: 22 Apr 2020 Publication Status: Review Complete

See all articles by Zhaodong Li

Zhaodong Li

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Biosciences Center

Wei Xiong

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Chemistry and Nanoscience Center

Bertrand J. Tremolet de Villers

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Biosciences Center

Chao Wu

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Chemistry and Nanoscience Center

Bennett Addison

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Chemistry and Nanoscience Center

Drazenka Svedruzic

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Chemistry and Nanoscience Center

Jeff Blackburn

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Materials, Chemical and Computational Science Directorate; National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Biosciences Center

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Abstract

Bio-electrochemical systems have been applied successfully for electroreduction of waste carbon dioxide to chemicals. Despite the recent advances in biocathode design and performance, a fundamental understanding of how support electrode materials affect growth, organization and electroactivity of biofilms, and electron transfer across the electrode/bacterium interface is still lacking. Our study demonstrates that surface nanostructuring with semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) is beneficial for interfacial charge transfer and CO2 reducing activities of Clostridium ljungdahlii biofilms by mimicking the biological functions of conductive bio-wires, not by the commonly suggested mechanism of simply increasing biofilm coverage. We also show that applying a negative potential during biofilm growth is essential for production of electroactive biofilms. 13C isotope labeling experiments conclusively demonstrate that biocathodes can simultaneously utilize ethanol while reducing CO2. Deuterium isotope labeling experiments confirmed that the availability of electrochemically produced H2 as a redox mediator does not limit the efficiency of extracellular electron transfer (EET) and CO2 electro-reduction. These results provide important mechanistic information about EET across the bacterium/material interface in a model biohybrid system.

Keywords: microbial electrosynthesis, biohybrid interfaces, acetogenic, bacteria, carbon dioxide, carbon nanotube

Suggested Citation

Li, Zhaodong and Xiong, Wei and de Villers, Bertrand J. Tremolet and Wu, Chao and Addison, Bennett and Svedruzic, Drazenka and Blackburn, Jeff, Semiconducting Single Wall Carbon Nanotubes as Artificial Pili for Enhanced CO 2 Clostridium ljungdahlii Biofilms. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3575133 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3575133
This version of the paper has not been formally peer reviewed.

Zhaodong Li

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Biosciences Center

United States

Wei Xiong

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Chemistry and Nanoscience Center

United States

Bertrand J. Tremolet De Villers

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Biosciences Center

United States

Chao Wu

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Chemistry and Nanoscience Center

United States

Bennett Addison

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Chemistry and Nanoscience Center

United States

Drazenka Svedruzic

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Chemistry and Nanoscience Center

United States

Jeff Blackburn (Contact Author)

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Materials, Chemical and Computational Science Directorate ( email )

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - Biosciences Center ( email )

United States

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