Metal oxide surfaces and their interactions with aqueous solutions and microbial organisms

GE Brown Jr, V Henrich, W Casey, D Clark… - 1999 - digitalcommons.unl.edu
During the past decade, interest in chemical reactions occurring at metal oxide-aqueous
solution interfaces has increased significantly because of their importance in a variety of …

Iron and manganese in anaerobic respiration: environmental significance, physiology, and regulation

KH Nealson, D Saffarini - Annual review of microbiology, 1994 - go.gale.com
Iron and manganese are abundant transition metals that are commonly associated with
carbon oxidation. The reduction of these metals, along with carbon oxidation occurs in …

A mediator-less microbial fuel cell using a metal reducing bacterium, Shewanella putrefaciens

HJ Kim, HS Park, MS Hyun, IS Chang, M Kim… - Enzyme and Microbial …, 2002 - Elsevier
Direct electron transfer from different Shewanella putrefaciens strains to an electrode was
examined using cyclic voltammetry and a fuel cell type electrochemical cell. Both methods …

Bacterial Recognition of Mineral Surfaces: Nanoscale Interactions Between Shewanella and α-FeOOH

SK Lower, MF Hochella Jr, TJ Beveridge - Science, 2001 - science.org
Force microscopy has been used to quantitatively measure the infinitesimal forces that
characterize interactions between Shewanella oneidensis (a dissimilatory metal-reducing …

Biological fuel cells and their applications

AK Shukla, P Suresh, S Berchmans… - Current …, 2004 - repository.ias.ac.in
One type of genuine fuel cell that does hold promise in the long-term is the biological fuel
cell. Unlike conventional fuel cells, which employ hydrogen, ethanol and methanol as fuel …

Microbial reduction of iron (III) oxyhydroxides: effects of mineral solubility and availability

S Bonneville, P Van Cappellen, T Behrends - Chemical Geology, 2004 - Elsevier
The rate of Fe (III) reductive dissolution by ascorbate has been shown by [Larsen, O. and
Postma, D., 2001. Kinetics of reductive bulk dissolution of lepidocrocite, ferrihydrite and …

Electrochemical activity of an Fe(III)-reducing bacterium, Shewanella putrefaciens IR-1, in the presence of alternative electron acceptors

BH Kim, T Ikeda, HS Park, HJ Kim, MS Hyun… - Biotechnology …, 1999 - Springer
Cyclic voltammetry demonstrated that cells of Shewanella putrefaciens grown under
anaerobic conditions without nitrate were electrochemically active. The electrochemical …

Cloning and sequence of cymA, a gene encoding a tetraheme cytochrome c required for reduction of iron (III), fumarate, and nitrate by Shewanella putrefaciens MR-1

CR Myers, JM Myers - Journal of Bacteriology, 1997 - Am Soc Microbiol
The cymA gene, which encodes a tetraheme cytochrome c, was cloned from Shewanella
putrefaciens MR-1. This gene complemented a mutant which had a TnphoA insertion in …

Shewanella putrefaciens mtrB Encodes an Outer Membrane Protein Required for Fe(III) and Mn(IV) Reduction

AS Beliaev, DA Saffarini - Journal of bacteriology, 1998 - Am Soc Microbiol
Iron and manganese oxides or oxyhydroxides are abundant transition metals, and in aquatic
environments they serve as terminal electron acceptors for a large number of bacterial …

Fe (III) and Mn (IV) reduction

DR Lovley - Environmental Microbe‐Metal Interactions, 2000 - Wiley Online Library
This chapter summarizes the known environmental consequences of Fe (III) respiration as
well as related forms of respiration such as reduction of Mn (IV) and humic substances. The …