FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE听|听July 31, 2013

Electrified sewage: New American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网 video on electricity from wastewater

WASHINGTON, July 31, 2013 鈥� Shocking as it may seem, wastewater flushed down toilets and sinks is getting a new life thanks to special fuel cells that use it to produce electricity, according to in the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网鈥檚 (ACS鈥�) Bytesize Science series. Produced by the world鈥檚 largest scientific society, the video is at .

Bruce E. Logan, Ph.D., featured in the video, points out that sewage treatment traditionally has been a big consumer of electricity. With the new fuel cells, that situation could be reversed, with sewage becoming the raw material for making electricity, Logan says. In the video, he explains how bacteria in the fuel cells feed on organic matter in wastewater to produce electrons 鈥� the stuff of electricity.

Logan鈥檚 research group at the Pennsylvania State University is among those in different parts of the world studying prototype microbial fuel cells. The prototypes are laying the foundation for larger, more efficient microbial fuel cells that could be used by sewage treatment plants in communities around the country.

For more entertaining, informative science videos and podcasts from the ACS Office of Public Affairs, view , Spellbound, Science Elements and Global Challenges/Chemistry Solutions.

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Bruce E. Logan, Ph.D. holding a microbial fuel cell
Bruce E. Logan, Ph.D., holds the prototype of a microbial fuel cell, which uses wastewater to generate electricity.
Credit: XiaoZhi Lim, American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网
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