Research Evolved from Studies Using Fungi to Stabilise Toxic Waste Lead & Uranium : University of Dundee Produces Electrochemical Materials using Bread Mould

University of Dundee bread mould research

Researchers at the University of Dundee have found naturally occurring red bread mould which could play a crucial role in the production sustainable electrochemical materials for use in rechargeable batteries,

Reporting in the Cell Press journal, Current Biology, the researchers claimed to have shown for the first time that the fungus Neurospora crassa – commonly known as red bread mould – can transform manganese into a mineral composite with favourable electrochemical properties.

As part of the study the fungus was combined with urea and manganese chloride and observed. The combination of these factors was said to have resulted in a `biomineralised’ product which was subsequently subjected to intense heat treatment to produce a mixture of carbonised biomass and manganese oxides.

Tests on these structures were said to have shown that they have ideal electrochemical properties for use in supercapacitors or lithium-ion batteries.

The carbonised fungal biomass-mineral composite was also claimed to retain 90% of its capacity after 200 cycles of charging, making it an ideal target for using in rechargeable batteries.

“We have made electrochemically active materials using a fungal manganese biomineralisation process,” explained Professor Geoffrey Gadd, who heads the Geomicrobiology Group at the University of Dundee.

“The electrochemical properties of the carbonised fungal biomass-mineral composite were tested in a supercapacitor and a lithium-ion battery, and the composite was found to have excellent electrochemical properties,” he continued. “This system therefore suggests a novel biotechnological method for the preparation of sustainable electrochemical materials.”

Years of Research

Professor Gadd and his colleagues in the School of Life Sciences at Dundee were said to have long studied the ability of fungi to transform metals and minerals in useful and surprising ways. In earlier studies, the researchers showed that fungi could stabilise toxic lead and uranium, for example.

That led the researchers to wonder whether fungi could offer a useful alternative strategy for the preparation of novel electrochemical materials too.

“We had the idea that the decomposition of such biomineralised carbonates into oxides might provide a novel source of metal oxides that have significant electrochemical properties,” said Professor Gadd.

According to the University there have in fact have been many efforts to improve lithium-ion battery or supercapacitor performance using alternative electrode materials such as carbon nanotubes and other manganese oxides. But few considered a role for fungi in the manufacturing process.

Latest Results

In the new study, the Dundee team incubated N. crassa in media amended with urea and manganese chloride (MnCl2) and watched what happened.

The researchers found that the long branching fungal filaments (or hyphae) became biomineralised and/or enveloped by minerals in various formations. After heat treatment, they were left with the mixture of carbonised biomass and manganese oxides.

“We were surprised that the prepared biomass-Mn oxide composite performed so well,” commented Professor Gadd. “In comparison to other reported manganese oxides in lithium-ion batteries, the carbonised fungal biomass-mineral composite showed an excellent cycling stability and more than 90% capacity was retained after 200 cycles.”

The new study is claimed to be the first to demonstrate the synthesis of active electrode materials using a fungal biomineralisation process, illustrating the great potential of these fungal processes as a source of useful biomaterials.

Professor Gadd said the team will continue to explore the use of fungi in producing various potentially useful metal carbonates. They are also interested in investigating such processes for the biorecovery of valuable or scarce metal elements in other chemical forms.

Current Biology, Lie and Gadd et al can be found here “Fungal Biomineralization of Manganese as a Novel Source of Electrochemical Materials

Read More

Researchers Develop Microbial Fuel Cell with Food Waste Derived Catalysts

A new fuel cell that could use carbon catalysts derived from various food wastes to turn urine into electricity is being developed by researchers from University of Bath, Queen Mary University of London and the Bristol Robotics Laboratory.

VIDEO: Researchers Power Biological Fuel Cell with Waste Tomatoes

A biological fuel cell that converts tomato waste to energy has been successfully demonstrated by researchers tested the rom South Dakota School of Mines & Technology.

German Researchers Use Apple Waste in High-Power Sodium-Ion Batteries

Researchers at Germany’s Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) are developing an active material produced from waste apples, and another material of layered oxides, which could reduce the costs of future carbon-based sodium-ion batteries for energy storage systems.