Iron-metabolizing bacteria can load electrons from microscopic particles of magnetite (magnetic iron oxides) and later, discharge electrons to the microparticles, which could lead to a new way to clean up environmental pollution and other bioengineering applications, an international team of researchers have found.

For example, using light energy, magnetite can reduce (gain electrons from) the toxic form of chromium, chromium VI, converting it to the less toxic chromium III, which can then be incorporated into a harmless magnetite crystal.

“In our study we only looked at iron-metabolizing bacteria, but we speculate that it might be possible for other non-iron metabolizing organisms to use magnetite as a battery as well, or they can be made to use it, through genetic engineering,” said study leader James Byrne from the University of Tübingen

As the researchers note in the journal Science on March 27, they showed that in simulated daylight, phototrophic iron-oxidizing bacteria (Rhodopseudomonas palustris) removed electrons from the magnetite, thereby discharging it. At night, the iron-reducing bacteria (G. sulfurreducens) took over and were able to dump electrons back onto the magnetite and recharge it for the following cycle.

This oxidation/reduction (redox) mechanism was repeated over several cycles, meaning that the “battery” functioned over repeated day-night cycles. This could also work with other types of bacteria that do not normally require iron to grow, e.g., fermenters, the researchers suggest.

Scientists at the University of Manchester and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory were also involved in the research.

Abstract of Redox cycling of Fe(II) and Fe(III) in magnetite by Fe-metabolizing bacteria