| Bacteria Fermenting Waste into LOTS OF H2! |
| Written by John Barrie | ||
| Monday, 19 November 2007 | ||
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PennStateUniversity and Ion Power Inc. have developed a process that uses bacteria in an electrically charged fuel cell called a Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC) to get high yields of hydrogen. Prof. Bruce Logan of PSU:
The bacteria consume acetic acid, which is produced in the cellulosic fermentation process or in the Mix Alco process. Cellulosic fermentation requires enzymes to convert cellulose to sugars that can then be fermented. The Mix Alco process converts cellulose to acetic acid through a process that mimics how a cow’s stomach digests grass. The Department of Energy has found an algae that makes hydrogen, which means we might be at the dawn of an interspecies competition for hydrogen domination! Via: Wired Science
Comments
(6)
Don't get me wrong...
written by AlienFarmer , November 19, 2007
And to think I was excited about algal o
written by Webster , November 19, 2007
This takes us one step further. Now just find a way to make a garage sized unit and people can fill their own cars.
oh please
written by nuveshen , November 19, 2007
'This takes us one step further.'
not really, and this is nothing new, plus, there is always going to be issues aroung hydrogen's strorage and distribution. 'Now just find a way to make a garage sized unit and people can fill their own cars.' And what are you gonna ferment in your garage to produce hydrogen? It would be better off to just use the fermentation products directly. I'm with alien farmer and would rather look to electric vehicles as a solution.
...
written by merlia , November 20, 2007
It is a well-written piece about Bacteria. It is informative as well as interesting coverage and the link is also informative. Good post!
The point of garage sized units
written by Webster , November 20, 2007
is that you get around the distribution issues. At some point, you'll need to power cars with something. I'm all for electric cars, but if they are powered by coal-plants, we've just displaced the pollution.
an article...
written by Lorenzo Rambaldi , November 22, 2007 | ||
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Science, technology gadgets and...baby seals. We're in a bit of an eco-mess, but we've got the brains to lick any problem. And that's why EcoGeek.org publishes up to ten stories daily about innovations that are saving the planet.
And if that sounds interesting to you, then congratulations, you're an EcoGeek.
AlienFarmer
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