New method uses solar biofilms to eliminate soil pollutants
Recent research has shown that iron-mineral-bacterial biofilms can effectively degrade environmental pollutants using solar energy. This new approach not only improves the degradation of antibiotics such as tetracycline hydrochloride and chloramphenicol, but also represents an important advance for sustainable pollution control and bioremediation.
Scientists have discovered that non-phototrophic microbes in soil can utilize sunlight through mineral-microbe interactions, expanding the recognized impact of solar energy beyond photosynthesis. By exploiting the interactions between iron minerals and bacteria, researchers have developed biofilms with charge-storage capabilities, allowing pollutant reduction even in soil zones where light is limited.
A study published in Environmental and Biogeochemical Processes on September 15, 2025, by teams from Kunming University of Science and Technology and the University of Massachusetts, introduces an efficient and scalable strategy for cleaning contaminated soil and groundwater. The research focused on the interaction between iron oxide minerals and Bacillus megaterium bacteria, revealing a system capable of accumulating and releasing electrons during alternating light and dark cycles. The charge storage mechanism was more effective with higher bacterial density and additional light exposure.
Crucially, the system exhibited a measurable photovoltage memory effect and continuous function, similar to a biological capacitor. This resulted in marked improvements in the efficiency of pollutant breakdown, with the breakdown of tetracycline hydrochloride and chloramphenicol increasing by 66.7 percent and 46.7 percent respectively after targeted light exposure. This improved efficiency was linked to electron transfer and storage within the biofilm structure, confirmed by both structural and electrochemical analysis.
The bio-photovoltage biofilm system offers a promising solution for environmental restoration, providing pollution control that continues without the need for constant lighting. Its ability to store solar energy and then release it to break down pollutants makes it an innovative option for remediating antibiotic contamination in soil and groundwater.
Research report:A bio-photovoltage soil microbe battery for the degradation of antibiotics in the dark
