Bio-Electrochemical Sensor for Fast Analysis of Assimilable Organic Carbon in Seawater

Research Article

Soon Bee Quek, Liang Cheng

Abstract

A Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC) based biosensor for the determination of Assimilable Organic Carbon (AOC) in seawater was developed by establishing an anodophilic marine biofilm on the surface of an electrode poised at +250 mV (vs Ag/AgCl) rather than the traditionally used potentials of about -300 mV. A linear correlation (R2>0.99) between electrochemical signals (peak current) and acetate concentration ranging 10 to 55 μM was achieved.Using the positive anodic potential enabled the rapid establishment of the electrochemically active anodophilic biomass within a period of less than 8 days, a higher sensitivity (0.017 mA/μM acetate added) and a lower detection limit (2.5 μM acetate, 0.16 mg O2/L of Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD)) compared to the negative anodic potential. Further, it was shown that this bio-electrochemical AOC sensor could tolerate the presence of low concentrations of dissolved oxygen. The established potentiostat controlled MFC biosensor could be used for the purpose of online water quality monitoring for seawater desalination plants prone to biofouling of RO membranes.

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