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Dive into the research topics where Sven Kerzenmacher is active.

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Featured researches published by Sven Kerzenmacher.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2011

A highly efficient buckypaper-based electrode material for mediatorless laccase-catalyzed dioxygen reduction

L. Hussein; Stefanie Rubenwolf; F. von Stetten; Gerald Urban; Roland Zengerle; Michael Krueger; Sven Kerzenmacher

The redox enzyme laccase from Trametes versicolor efficiently catalyzes the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in mediatorless biofuel cell cathodes when adsorbed onto multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs). In this work we demonstrate that the fabrication of MWCNTs in form of buckypaper (BP) results in an excellent electrode material for laccase-catalyzed cathodes. BPs are mechanically stable, self-entangling mats with high dispersion of MWCNTs resulting in easy to handle homogeneous layers with highly mesoporous structures and excellent electrical conductivities. All biocathodes have been electrochemically investigated in oxygen-saturated buffer at pH 5 by galvanostatic polarization and potentiodynamic linear sweep voltammetry. Both methods confirm an efficient direct interaction of laccase with BP with a high open circuit potential of 0.882 V vs. normal hydrogen electrode (NHE). The high oxygen reduction performance leads to high current densities of 422±71 μA cm(-2) at a typical cathode potential of 0.744 V vs. NHE. When the current density is normalized to the mass of the electrode material (mass activity), the BP-based film electrodes exhibit a 68-fold higher current density at 0.744 V vs. NHE than electrodes fabricated from the same MWCNTs in a non-dispersed agglomerated form as packed electrodes. This clearly shows that MWCNTs can act more efficiently as cathode when prepared in form of BP. This can be attributed to reduced diffusional mass transfer limitations and enhanced electrical conductivity. BP is thus a very promising material for the construction of mediatorless laccase cathodes for ORR in biofuel cells. In addition we demonstrated that these electrodes exhibit a high tolerance towards glucose, the most common bioanode fuel.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Cyclic Electrodeposition of PtCu Alloy: Facile Fabrication of Highly Porous Platinum Electrodes

Arne Kloke; Christian Köhler; Ramona Gerwig; Roland Zengerle; Sven Kerzenmacher

Cyclic electrodeposition of platinum and copper enables the fabrication of high surface area electrodes (roughness factors of >3000) by multiple alternation of alloy co-deposition and dealloying of copper from the just-fabricated alloy layers. The underlying processes, resulting electrode structures, and their applicability to potentially implantable glucose fuel cells are discussed.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2010

Involvement and specificity of Shewanella oneidensis outer membrane cytochromes in the reduction of soluble and solid‐phase terminal electron acceptors

Clemens Bücking; Felix Popp; Sven Kerzenmacher; Johannes Gescher

The formation of outer membrane (OM) cytochromes seems to be a key step in the evolution of dissimilatory iron-reducing bacteria. They are believed to be the endpoints of an extended respiratory chain to the surface of the cell that establishes the connection to insoluble electron acceptors such as iron or manganese oxides. The gammaproteobacterium Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 contains the genetic information for five putative OM cytochromes. In this study, the role and specificity of these proteins were investigated. All experiments were conducted using a markerless deletion mutant in all five OM cytochromes that was complemented via the expression of single, plasmid-encoded genes. MtrC and MtrF were shown to be potent reductases of chelated ferric iron, birnessite, and a carbon anode in a microbial fuel cell. OmcA-producing cells were unable to catalyze iron and electrode reduction, although the protein was correctly produced and oriented. However, OmcA production resulted in a higher birnessite reduction rate compared with the mutant. The presence of the decaheme cytochrome SO_2931 as well as the diheme cytochrome SO_1659 did not rescue the phenotype of the deletion mutant.


Bioresource Technology | 2013

Systematic screening of carbon-based anode materials for microbial fuel cells with Shewanella oneidensis MR-1

Elena Kipf; Julia Koch; Bettina Geiger; Johannes Erben; Katrin Richter; Johannes Gescher; Roland Zengerle; Sven Kerzenmacher

We present a systematic screening of carbon-based anode materials for microbial fuel cells with Shewanella oneidensis MR-1. Under anoxic conditions nanoporous activated carbon cloth is a superior anode material in terms of current density normalized to the projected anode area and anode volume (24.0±0.3 μA cm(-2) and 482±7 μA cm(-3) at -0.2 vs. SCE, respectively). The good performance can be attributed to the high specific surface area of the material, which is available for mediated electron transfer through self-secreted flavins. Under aerated conditions no influence of the specific surface area is observed, which we attribute to a shift from primary indirect electron transfer by mediators to direct electron transfer via adherent cells. Furthermore, we show that an aerated initial growth phase enhances the current density under subsequent anoxic conditions fivefold when compared to a similar experiment that was conducted under permanently anoxic conditions.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2011

Strategies to extend the lifetime of bioelectrochemical enzyme electrodes for biosensing and biofuel cell applications

Stefanie Rubenwolf; Sven Kerzenmacher; Roland Zengerle; Felix von Stetten

Enzymes are powerful catalysts for biosensor and biofuel cell electrodes due to their unique substrate specificity. This specificity is defined by the amino acid chains complex three-dimensional structure based on non-covalent forces, being also responsible for the very limited enzyme lifetime of days to weeks. Many electrochemical applications, however, would benefit from lifetimes over months to years. This mini-review provides a critical overview of strategies and ideas dealing with the problem of short enzyme lifetime, which limits the overall lifetime of bioelectrochemical electrodes. The most common approaches aim to stabilize the enzyme itself. Various immobilization techniques have been used to reduce flexibility of the amino acid chain by introducing covalent or non-covalent binding forces to external molecules. The enzyme can also be stabilized using genetic engineering methods to increase the binding forces within the protein or by optimizing the environment in order to reduce destabilizing interactions. In contrast, renewing the inactivated catalyst decouples overall system lifetime from the limited enzyme lifetime and thereby promises theoretically unlimited electrode lifetimes. Active catalyst can be supplied by exchanging the electrolyte repeatedly. Alternatively, integrated microorganisms can display the enzymes on their surface or secrete them to the electrolyte, allowing unattended power supply for long-term applications.


Bioresource Technology | 2015

Unbalanced fermentation of glycerol in Escherichia coli via heterologous production of an electron transport chain and electrode interaction in microbial electrochemical cells

Katrin Sturm-Richter; Frederik Golitsch; Gunnar Sturm; Elena Kipf; André Dittrich; Sebastian Beblawy; Sven Kerzenmacher; Johannes Gescher

Microbial electrochemical cells are an emerging technology for achieving unbalanced fermentations. However, organisms that can serve as potential biocatalysts for this application are limited by their narrow substrate spectrum. This study describes the reprogramming of Escherichia coli for the efficient use of anodes as electron acceptors. Electron transfer into the periplasm was accelerated by 183% via heterologous expression of the c-type cytochromes CymA, MtrA and STC from Shewanella oneidensis. STC was identified as a target for heterologous expression via a two-stage screening approach. First, mass spectroscopic analysis revealed natively expressed cytochromes in S. oneidensis. Thereafter, the corresponding genes were cloned and expressed in E. coli to quantify periplasmic electron transfer activity using methylene blue. This redox dye was further used to expand electron transfer to carbon electrode surfaces. The results demonstrate that E. coli can be reprogrammed from glycerol fermentation to respiration upon production of the new electron transport chain.


Bioresource Technology | 2014

Characterization of microbial current production as a function of microbe-electrode-interaction

Kerstin Dolch; Joana Danzer; Tobias Kabbeck; Benedikt Bierer; Johannes Erben; Andreas H. Förster; Jan Maisch; Peter Nick; Sven Kerzenmacher; Johannes Gescher

Microbe-electrode-interactions are keys for microbial fuel cell technology. Nevertheless, standard measurement routines to analyze the interplay of microbial physiology and material characteristics have not been introduced yet. In this study, graphite anodes with varying surface properties were evaluated using pure cultures of Shewanella oneidensis and Geobacter sulfurreducens, as well as defined and undefined mixed cultures. The evaluation routine consisted of a galvanostatic period, a current sweep and an evaluation of population density. The results show that surface area correlates only to a certain extent with population density and anode performance. Furthermore, the study highlights a strain-specific microbe-electrode-interaction, which is affected by the introduction of another microorganism. Moreover, evidence is provided for the possibility of translating results from pure culture to undefined mixed species experiments. This is the first study on microbe-electrode-interaction that systematically integrates and compares electrochemical and biological data.


international conference on micro electro mechanical systems | 2006

A One-Compartment, Direct Glucose Fuel Cell for Powering Long-Term Medical Implants

Felix von Stetten; Sven Kerzenmacher; A. Lorenz; V. Chokkalingam; N. Miyakawa; Roland Zengerle; Jens Ducrée

We present the operational concept, microfabrication, and electrical performance of an enzyme-less direct glucose fuel cell for harvesting the chemical energy of glucose from body fluids. The spatial concentrations of glucose and oxygen at the electrodes of the one-compartment setup are established by self-organization, governed by the balance of electro-chemical depletion and membrane diffusion. Compared to less stable enzymatic and immunogenic microbial fuel cells, this robust approach excels with an extended life time, the amenability to sterilization and biocompatibility, showing up a clear route towards an autonomous power supply for long-term medical implants without the need of surgical replacement and external refueling. Operating in physiological phosphate buffer solution containing 0.1 wt% glucose and having a geometrical cathode area of 10 cm2, our prototype already delivers 20 µ W peak power over a period of 7 days.


Chemsuschem | 2013

Overcoming Bottlenecks of Enzymatic Biofuel Cell Cathodes: Crude Fungal Culture Supernatant Can Help to Extend Lifetime and Reduce Cost

Sabine Sané; Claude Jolivalt; Gerhard Mittler; Peter J. Nielsen; Stefanie Rubenwolf; Roland Zengerle; Sven Kerzenmacher

Enzymatic biofuel cells (BFCs) show great potential for the direct conversion of biochemically stored energy from renewable biomass resources into electricity. However, enzyme purification is time-consuming and expensive. Furthermore, the long-term use of enzymatic BFCs is hindered by enzyme degradation, which limits their lifetime to only a few weeks. We show, for the first time, that crude culture supernatant from enzyme-secreting microorganisms (Trametes versicolor) can be used without further treatment to supply the enzyme laccase to the cathode of a mediatorless BFC. Polarization curves show that there is no significant difference in the cathode performance when using crude supernatant that contains laccase compared to purified laccase in culture medium or buffer solution. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the oxygen reduction activity of this enzymatic cathode can be sustained over a period of at least 120 days by periodic resupply of crude culture supernatant. This is more than five times longer than control cathodes without the resupply of culture supernatant. During the operation period of 120 days, no progressive loss of potential is observed, which suggests that significantly longer lifetimes than shown in this work may be possible. Our results demonstrate the possibility to establish simple, cost efficient, and mediatorless enzymatic BFC cathodes that do not require expensive enzyme purification procedures. Furthermore, they show the feasibility of an enzymatic BFC with an extended lifetime, in which self-replicating microorganisms provide the electrode with catalytically active enzymes in a continuous or periodic manner.


Bioresource Technology | 2015

Improving the performance of a biofuel cell cathode with laccase-containing culture supernatant from Pycnoporus sanguineus.

Oleksandra Fokina; Jens Eipper; Lex Winandy; Sven Kerzenmacher; Reinhard Fischer

Laccases are multicopper oxidoreductases that can be used in biofuel cells to improve cathode performance by cathodic oxygen reduction. Here we present a laccase from the ligninolytic white-rot fungus Pycnoporus sanguineus that, in contrast to the Trametes versicolor laccase, can be produced in the absence of inducers in a standard culture medium. After 7days of cultivation the activity of this laccase in culture supernatant reached 2.5U/ml, which is high enough for direct application of the supernatant in biofuel cells. The highest current density of 115.0±3.5μA/cm(2) at 400mV vs. SCE was obtained at pH 5 with a buckypaper cathode with a laccase-containing culture supernatant. The enzyme also showed electrocatalytic activity at pH 6 and 7. These results not only present a new cost-efficient laccase for improving cathode performance, but also show that new laccases with different catalytic properties can be suitable for biofuel cells.

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Johannes Gescher

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Arne Kloke

University of Freiburg

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Maxi Frei

University of Freiburg

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Elena Kipf

University of Freiburg

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