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Title: Facile fabrication of scalable, hierarchically structured polymer/carbon architectures for bioelectrodes. Author: Luckarift HR, Sizemore SR, Farrington KE, Roy J, Lau C, Atanassov PB, Johnson GR. Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces; 2012 Apr; 4(4):2082-7. PubMed ID: 22394146. Abstract: This research introduces a method for fabrication of conductive electrode materials with hierarchical structure from porous polymer/carbon composite materials. We describe the fabrication of (3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate) (PHBV) scaffolds doped with carbon materials that provide a conductive three-dimensional architecture that was demonstrated for application in microbial fuel cell (MFC) anodes. Composite electrodes from PHBV were fabricated to defined dimensions by solvent casting and particulate leaching of a size-specific porogen (in this case, sucrose). The cellular biocompatibility of the resulting composite material facilitated effective immobilization of a defined preparation of Shewanella oneidensis DSP-10 as a model microbial catalyst. Bacterial cells were immobilized via chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of silica to create an engineered biofilm that exhibits efficient bioelectrocatalysis of a simple-carbon fuel in a MFC. The functionalized PHBV electrodes demonstrate stable and reproducible anodic open circuit potentials of -320 ± 20 mV (vs Ag/AgCl) with lactate as the electron donor. Maximum power densities achieved by the hierarchically structured electrodes (~5 mW cm(3)) were significantly higher than previously observed for graphite-felt electrodes. The methodology for fabrication of scalable electrode materials may be amenable to other bioelectrochemical applications, such as enzyme fuel cells and biosensors, and could easily be adapted to various design concepts.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]