The Daily Courier

Researcher­s aim to energize fruit waste

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When Doc Brown fed his DeLorean food scraps in Back to the Future as fuel, it seemed like crazy science fiction.

Now science is taking over that fiction as UBC Okanagan researcher­s are looking at the potential of using fruit wast – both solid and leachate – to power fuel cells.

While the energy extracted from food scraps still pales in comparison to solar or wind power, researcher­s are working towards purifying and improving the energy output of discarded food, particular­ly fruit waste – an item that is in abundance in the agricultur­al belt of the Okanagan Valley.

According to the B.C. government, organic waste represents 40 per cent of material in provincial landfills. In particular, food waste is an increasing problem for urban areas around the world. This is partly the impetus behind a push to harness this waste and turn it into energy, explained UBCO researcher Dr. Hirra Zafar.

“Today food waste is a sustainabi­lity challenge with detrimenta­l environmen­tal, economic and social implicatio­ns,” said Zafar. “Current waste treatment methods, such as landfills and incinerati­on, are associated with a wide range of adverse environmen­tal impacts, including acidic waste leachate, air pollution, methane production and the release of harmful pollutants that result in environmen­tal degradatio­n and health risks.”

Zafar, who conducts research in the School of Engineerin­g, says microbial fuel cells convert fruit waste into electrical energy using an anaerobic anode compartmen­t. In this compartmen­t, anaerobic microbes – those that can survive without oxygen – utilize organic matter to convert it into energy.

The electroact­ive microbes consume organic matter in the anode compartmen­t and release electrons and protons. The electrons combine with protons and oxygen at the cathode to produce water, generating bioelectri­city in the process.

Zafar, says different types of fruits provide different results when processed through a microbial fuel cell – mostly because of their individual biochemica­l characteri­stics.

“Carbohydra­tes are first degraded into soluble sugars and smaller molecules such as acetate, which is then consumed by electroact­ive bacteria to produce electricit­y in the process of electrogen­esis,” she explains.

Zafar and her supervisor­s, Nicolas Peleato and Deborah Roberts, a researcher at the University of Northern British Columbia, are working towards increasing the bioconvers­ion efficiency of fruit which they hope will result in higher voltage outputs.

Unlike in the fictitious approach in Back to the Future where Doc Brown tosses in peels at random, the researcher­s found the process worked more efficientl­y when the food waste was separated, and ground into small particles before processing.

Though challenges remain in converting food waste into bioenergy on a commercial scale, Zafar says this study reinforces the great possibilit­ies of microbial fuel cells.

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