Renewable Energy from Livestock Waste Valorization: Amyloid-Based Feather Keratin Fuel Cells.
Wei Long SoonMohammad PeydayeshTym de WildFelix DonatRinku SaranChristoph R MüllerLorenz GublerRaffaele MezzengaAli MiserezPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Increasing carbon emissions have accelerated climate change, resulting in devastating effects that are now tangible on an everyday basis. This is mirrored by a projected increase in global energy demand of approximately 50% within a single generation, urging a shift from fossil-fuel-derived materials toward greener materials and more sustainable manufacturing processes. Biobased industrial byproducts, such as side streams from the food industry, are attractive alternatives with strong potential for valorization due to their large volume, low cost, renewability, biodegradability, and intrinsic material properties. Here, we demonstrate the reutilization of industrial chicken feather waste into proton-conductive membranes for fuel cells, protonic transistors, and water-splitting devices. Keratin was isolated from chicken feathers via a fast and economical process, converted into amyloid fibrils through heat treatment, and further processed into membranes with an imparted proton conductivity of 6.3 mS cm -1 using a simple oxidative method. The functionality of the membranes is demonstrated by assembling them into a hydrogen fuel cell capable of generating 25 mW cm -2 of power density to operate various types of devices using hydrogen and air as fuel. Additionally, these membranes were used to generate hydrogen through water splitting and in protonic field-effect transistors as thin-film modulators of protonic conductivity via the electrostatic gating effect. We believe that by converting industrial waste into renewable energy materials at low cost and high scalability, our green manufacturing process can contribute to a fully circular economy with a neutral carbon footprint.
Keyphrases
- low cost
- heavy metals
- climate change
- induced apoptosis
- wastewater treatment
- cell cycle arrest
- municipal solid waste
- sewage sludge
- risk assessment
- human health
- life cycle
- multiple sclerosis
- oxidative stress
- small molecule
- mass spectrometry
- drinking water
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell therapy
- single cell
- cell death
- ms ms
- stem cells
- visible light
- reduced graphene oxide
- cell proliferation