New Fuel Cell Cleans Up Pollution And
Produces Electricity
ScienceDaily (Dec. 4, 2007) —
Scientists in Pennsylvania are reporting development of a fuel cell that
uses pollution from coal and metal mines to generate electricity, solving
a serious environmental problem while providing a new source of energy.
They describe successful tests of a laboratory-scale version of the device
in a new study.
This fuel cell prototype uses pollution from coal and metal mines to
generate electricity. (Credit: Shaoan Cheng, Penn State University)
In the new study, Bruce E. Logan and colleagues point out that so-called
acid-mine drainage (AMD) is a serious environmental problem that threatens
the health of plants and animals as well as the safety of drinking-water
supplies, due mainly to the high acidity of contaminated waters and its high
content of metals, particularly iron. AMD poses difficult and costly
environmental clean-up problems.
They describe development of a new type of fuel cell that is based on
microbial fuel cells, which are capable of generating electricity from
wastewater. Using a solution similar to AMD, they showed that the device
efficiently removed dissolved iron from the solution while also generating
electricity at power levels similar to conventional microbial fuel cells.
Improvements in the fuel cell will lead to more efficient power generation
in the future, the researchers say. The iron recovered by the device can be
used as a pigment for paints or other products, they note.
The article "Electricity Generation from Synthetic Acid-Mine Drainage
(AMD) Water using Fuel Cell Technologies" is scheduled for the Dec. 1 issue
of ACS' Environmental Science & Technology.
Adapted from materials provided by
American Chemical Society.
Produces Electricity. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 6, 2007,
from http://www.sciencedaily.com
/releases/2007/12/071203120753.htm |