dc.description.abstract | Microbial fuel cells (MFC) are an emerging technology for wastewater treatment that
utilizes the metabolism of microorganisms to generate electricity from the organic matter present in
water directly. The principle of MFC is the same as hydrogen fuel cell and has three main components
(i.e., anode, cathode, and proton exchange membrane). The membrane separates the anode and
cathode chambers and keeps the anaerobic and aerobic conditions in the two chambers, respectively.
This review paper describes the state-of-the-art membrane materials particularly suited for MFC and
discusses the recent development to obtain robust, sustainable, and cost-effective membranes. Nafion
117, Flemion, and Hyflon are the typical commercially available membranes used in MFC. Use of nonfluorinated polymeric membrane materials such as sulfonated silicon dioxide (S-SiO2) in sulfonated
polystyrene ethylene butylene polystyrene (SSEBS), sulfonated polyether ether ketone (SPEEK) and
graphene oxide sulfonated polyether ether ketone (GO/SPEEK) membranes showed promising
output and proved to be an alternative material to Nafion 117. There are many challenges to selecting
a suitable membrane for a scaled-up MFC system so that the technology become technically and
economically viable. | en_US |