Ricky Ray
United States Naval Research Laboratory
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ricky Ray.
Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2009
Justin C. Biffinger; Ricky Ray; Brenda J. Little; Lisa A. Fitzgerald; Meghann Ribbens; Steven E. Finkel; Bradley R. Ringeisen
Changes in metabolism and cellular physiology of facultative anaerobes during oxygen exposure can be substantial, but little is known about how these changes connect with electrical current output from an operating microbial fuel cell (MFC). A high‐throughput voltage based screening assay (VBSA) was used to correlate current output from a MFC containing Shewanella oneidensis MR‐1 to carbon source (glucose or lactate) utilization, culture conditions, and biofilm coverage over 250 h. Lactate induced an immediate current response from S. oneidensis MR‐1, with both air‐exposed and anaerobic anodes throughout the duration of the experiments. Glucose was initially utilized for current output by MR‐1 when cultured and maintained in the presence of air. However, after repeated additions of glucose, the current output from the MFC decreased substantially while viable planktonic cell counts and biofilm coverage remained constant suggesting that extracellular electron transfer pathways were being inhibited. Shewanella maintained under an anaerobic atmosphere did not utilize glucose consistent with literature precedents. Operation of the VBSA permitted data collection from nine simultaneous S. oneidensis MR‐1 MFC experiments in which each experiment was able to demonstrate organic carbon source utilization and oxygen dependent biofilm formation on a carbon electrode. These data provide the first direct evidence of complex cellular responses to electron donor and oxygen tension by Shewanella in an operating MFC at select time points. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2009;103: 524–531. Published 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Corrosion | 2006
Brenda J. Little; Jason S. Lee; Ricky Ray
Abstract Diagnosing microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC) after it has occurred requires a combination of microbiological, metallurgical, and chemical analyses. MIC investigations have typic...
Bioresource Technology | 2011
Justin C. Biffinger; Lisa A. Fitzgerald; Ricky Ray; Brenda J. Little; Stephen E. Lizewski; Emily R. Petersen; Bradley R. Ringeisen; Wesley C. Sanders; Paul E. Sheehan; Jeremy J. Pietron; Jeffrey W. Baldwin; Lloyd J. Nadeau; Glenn R. Johnson; Meghann Ribbens; Steven E. Finkel; Kenneth H. Nealson
Shewanella-containing microbial fuel cells (MFCs) typically use the fresh water wild-type strain Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 due to its metabolic diversity and facultative oxidant tolerance. However, S. oneidensis MR-1 is not capable of metabolizing polysaccharides for extracellular electron transfer. The applicability of Shewanella japonica (an agar-lytic Shewanella strain) for power applications was analyzed using a diverse array of carbon sources for current generation from MFCs, cellular physiological responses at an electrode surface, biofilm formation, and the presence of soluble extracellular mediators for electron transfer to carbon electrodes. Critically, air-exposed S. japonica utilizes biosynthesized extracellular mediators for electron transfer to carbon electrodes with sucrose as the sole carbon source.
Corrosion | 2010
Jason S. Lee; Ricky Ray; Brenda J. Little
Abstract Methods for handling and storing natural coastal seawater, particularly methods for deaeration over time, influenced the chemistry and microflora. Bubbling nitrogen into natural seawater t...
Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2010
Ricky Ray; Stephen E. Lizewski; Lisa A. Fitzgerald; Brenda J. Little; Bradley R. Ringeisen
Nanofilament production by Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 was evaluated as a function of lifestyle (planktonic vs. sessile) under aerobic and anaerobic conditions using different sample preparation techniques prior to imaging with scanning electron microscopy. Nanofilaments could be imaged on MR-1 cells grown in biofilms or planktonically under both aerobic and anaerobic batch culture conditions after fixation, critical point drying and coating with a conductive metal. Critical point drying was a requirement for imaging nanofilaments attached to planktonically grown MR-1 cells, but not for cells grown in a biofilm. Techniques described in this paper cannot be used to differentiate nanowires from pili or flagella.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2006
Bradley R. Ringeisen; Emily Henderson; P. K. Wu; Jeremy J. Pietron; Ricky Ray; Brenda J. Little; Justin C. Biffinger; Joanne Jones-Meehan
Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2007
Justin C. Biffinger; Jeremy J. Pietron; Ricky Ray; Brenda J. Little; Bradley R. Ringeisen
Journal of Power Sources | 2007
Bradley R. Ringeisen; Ricky Ray; Brenda J. Little
Environmental Science & Technology | 2007
Justin C. Biffinger; Ricky Ray; Brenda J. Little; Bradley R. Ringeisen
Electroanalysis | 2010
Rachida A. Bouhenni; Gary J. Vora; Justin C. Biffinger; Sheetal Shirodkar; Ken Brockman; Ricky Ray; P. K. Wu; Brandy J. Johnson; Eulandria M. Biddle; Matthew J. Marshall; Lisa A. Fitzgerald; Brenda J. Little; Jim K. Fredrickson; Alexander S. Beliaev; Bradley R. Ringeisen; Daad A. Saffarini