MFC that was used on the study: a) cathode side, and b) anode side. Credit: Royal Society Open Science, doi: 10.1098/rsos.210996
In a new report now published on Royal Society Open Science, Mohammed Taha Amen and a team of scientists in bio-nanosystem engineering, chemical engineering and microbiology at the Chonbuk National University of South Korea, and the Zagazig University, Egypt, showed the possibility of using rainwater as a sustainable analyte in an air-cathode microbial fuel cell (MFC). The results showed how the constructs could work within a specific temperature range, under aerobic and anaerobic environments.
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