posted on 2013-11-13, 00:00authored byWen-Janq Chen, Mei-Hwa Lee, James
L. Thomas, Po-Hsun Lu, Ming-Huan Li, Hung-Yin Lin
Hydrogen
can be produced using microorganisms (e.g., bacteria and
algae); algal production has the additional ecological benefit of
carbon dioxide fixation. The conversion of hydrogen to electricity
via fuel cells may be more efficient compared to other energy sources
of electricity. However, the anode of biofuel cells requires the immobilization
of microorganisms or enzymes. In this work, poly(ethylene-co-vinyl alcohol) (EVAL), was coated on the electrode, and
green algae was microcontact imprinted onto the EVAL film. The readsorption
of algae onto algae-imprinted EVAL thin films was compared to determine
the ethylene content that gave highest imprinting effectiveness and
algal binding. Scanning electron microscopy and fluorescence spectrometry
were employed to characterize the surface morphology, recognition
capacity, and reusability of the algae-imprinted cavities. The recognition
of an individual algal cell by binding to the imprinted cavities was
directly observed by video microscopy. Finally, the power and current
density of the algal biofuel cell using the algae-imprinted EVAL-coated
electrode were measured at about 2-fold higher than electrode sputtered
platinum on poly(ethylene terephthalate).