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Jo Philips

Title

Associate Professor

Primary affiliation

Jo Philips

Areas of expertise

  • acetogenic bacteria
  • microbial electrosynthesis
  • gas fermentation

Contact information

Email address

Research

I am leading the Microbial Electrosynthesis Research Group at the Department of Biological and Chemical Engineering at Aarhus University.

My group explores how electricity can be used to power microbes for biotechnologically relevant conversions. We mainly work with acetogenic bacteria, as these microbes can convert CO₂ into acetate using H2 produced by an electrode. In addition, we study Shewanella, a microbe known for its unique extracellular electron transfer pathways.

Our overall goal is to generate fundamental insights into key microbial processes that will enable the optimization of electricity-powered microbial biotechnologies. Our research mainly focuses on hydrogen consumption, energy conservation, extracellular electron uptake mechanisms, and biofilm formation. We use both experimental studies and computational modelling.

Our work is mainly focused on optimizing Microbial Electrosynthesis (i.e. synthesis of organic molecules from CO2 by microbes powered by electricity). In addition, our work is relevant for gas fermentation, microbial corrosion, as well as microbial ecology in general.

In addition, I teach courses related to microbiology and microbial biotechnology.

Selected publications

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