January 1, 2010
Journal Article

Electrode-based approach for monitoring in situ microbial activity during subsurface bioremediation

Abstract

Current production by microorganisms colonizing subsurface electrodes and its relationship to substrate availability and microbial activity was evaluated in an aquifer undergoing bioremediation. Borehole graphite anodes were installed downgradient from a region of acetate injection designed to stimulate bioreduction of U(VI); cathodes consisted of graphite electrodes embedded at the ground surface. Significant increases in current density (=50 mA/m2) tracked delivery of acetate to the electrodes, dropping rapidly when acetate inputs were discontinued. An upgradient control produced low, steady currents (=0.2 mA/m2). Elevated current was strongly correlated with uranium removal but minimal correlation existed with elevated Fe(II). Confocal laser scanning microscopy of electrodes revealed firmly attached biofilms, and analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences indicated the electrode surfaces were dominated (67-80%) by Geobacter species. These results suggest that oxidation of acetate coupled to electron transfer to electrodes by Geobacter species was the primary source of current. This is the first demonstration that electrodes can produce readily detectable currents despite long-range (6 m) separation of anode and cathode and that current levels are likely related to rates of subsurface metabolism. It is expected that current production may serve as an effective proxy for monitoring in situ microbial activity in a variety of subsurface anoxic environments.

Revised: August 8, 2011 | Published: January 1, 2010

Citation

Williams K.H., K.P. Nevin, A. Franks, A.L. Englert, P.E. Long, and D.R. Lovley. 2010. Electrode-based approach for monitoring in situ microbial activity during subsurface bioremediation. Environmental Science & Technology 44, no. 1:47-54. PNNL-SA-68165. doi:10.1021/es9017464