ENERGY TECH
Tiny biobattery with 100-year shelf life runs on bacteria
Bacteria powered devices offer a whole new approach to medical devices.
Tiny biobattery with 100-year shelf life runs on bacteria
by Staff Writers
Binghamton UK (SPX) Apr 20, 2023
A tiny biobattery that could still work after 100 years has been developed by researchers at Binghamton University, State University of New York.

Last fall, Binghamton University Professor Seokheun "Sean" Choi and his Bioelectronics and Microsystems Laboratory published their research into an ingestible biobattery activated by the Ph factor of the human intestine.

Now, he and PhD student Maryam Rezaie have taken what they learned and incorporated it into new ideas for use outside the body.

A new study in the journal Small, which covers nanotechnology, shares the results from using spore-forming bacteria similar to the previous ingestible version to create a device that potentially would still work after 100 years.

"The overall objective is to develop a microbial fuel cell that can be stored for a relatively long period without degradation of biocatalytic activity and also can be rapidly activated by absorbing moisture from the air," said Choi, a faculty member in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science.

"We wanted to make these biobatteries for portable, storable and on-demand power generation capabilities," Choi said. "The problem is, how can we provide the long-term storage of bacteria until used? And if that is possible, then how would you provide on-demand battery activation for rapid and easy power generation? And how would you improve the power?"

The dime-sized fuel cell was sealed with a piece of Kapton tape, a material that can withstand temperatures from -500 to 750 degrees Fahrenheit. When the tape was removed and moisture allowed in, the bacteria mixed with a chemical germinant that encouraged the microbes to produce spores. The energy from that reaction produced enough to power an LED, a digital thermometer or a small clock.

Heat activation of the bacterial spores cut the time to full power from 1 hour to 20 minutes, and increasing the humidity led to higher electrical output. After a week of storage at room temperature, there was only a 2% drop in power generation.

The study is funded by the Office of Naval Research, and it's easy to imagine the military applications for a power source that could be deployed on the battlefield or in remote locations. However, there would be plenty of civilian uses for such a fuel cell, too.

While these are all good results, Choi knows that a fuel cell like this needs to power up more quickly and produce more voltage to become a viable alternative to traditional batteries.

"I think this is a good start," he said. "Hopefully, we can make a commercial product using these ideas."

Research Report:Moisture-Enabled Germination of Heat-Activated Bacillus Endospores for Rapid and Practical Bioelectricity Generation: Toward Portable, Storable Bacteria-Powered Biobatteries

Related Links
Binghamton University
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com

Tweet

ENERGY TECH
China's CATL unveils battery planned to power planes
Shanghai (AFP) April 19, 2023
China's CATL said Wednesday it was working with partners to develop electric passenger planes as they unveiled a condensed matter battery it said was strong enough to power such an aircraft. The world's biggest maker of batteries for electrical vehicles made the announcement at the Shanghai Auto Show and said it would also launch a version for cars that would go into mass production this year. "The launch of this cutting-edge technology breaks the limits that have long restricted the development ... read more

ENERGY TECH
Raytheon to provide Patriot air defense system to Switzerland

Aegis Combat System intercepts target during flight test

Ukraine forces complete Patriot training in US: Pentagon

PAC-3 flight test paves the way for new Patriot software release

ENERGY TECH
Raytheon Technologies selected by US Navy for anti-ship strike weapon

Partnering and integration speeds delivery of a hypersonic missile

Russia says fired anti-ship missiles at mock target in Sea of Japan

Lockheed Martin Developing Long Range Maneuverable Fires Missile For US Army

ENERGY TECH
Turkey unveils its first drone carrier

New algorithm keeps drones from colliding in midair

US Army selects Northrop Grumman and Shield AI team for tactical UAV prototype

Airbus achieves in-flight autonomous guidance and control of a drone from a tanker aircraft

ENERGY TECH
42-satellite constellation will provide resilient, secure comms for US troops globally

Building a Secure Resilient Satellite Infrastructure for Europe

Raytheon and SpiderOak collaborate to secure satcoms in crowded LEO

AFRL conducts first flight experiments for communications in terahertz band

ENERGY TECH
Developing agile, reliable sensing systems with microbes

US announces new $325 mn military aid package for Ukraine

Boeing signs joint weapons development deal with South Korea

Xi says China must strengthen training for 'actual combat'

ENERGY TECH
Seoul says military aid for Ukraine 'depends on Russia'

Polish PM blasts 'short-sighted' European opening to China after Macron visit

Serbia leader denies country sent weapons to Ukraine

Northrop Grumman expands space technology capabilities in Huntsville

ENERGY TECH
Anger as Chinese envoy questions post-Soviet nations

US urges Turkey, Hungary to ratify Sweden's NATO bid

Philippines ex-foreign minister who stood up to China dies at 83

G7 vows 'severe costs' for those helping Russia in Ukraine

ENERGY TECH