Energy

Experimental battery charges and recharges via bacteria

Experimental battery charges and recharges via bacteria
Someday, power from renewable sources could be stored in bacterial-based batteries
Someday, power from renewable sources could be stored in bacterial-based batteries
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The proof of concept microbial rechargeable battery combines microbial electrosynthesis and a microbial fuel cell in one system
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The proof of concept microbial rechargeable battery combines microbial electrosynthesis and a microbial fuel cell in one system
Someday, power from renewable sources could be stored in bacterial-based batteries
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Someday, power from renewable sources could be stored in bacterial-based batteries

Inside your body, the wrong kind of bacteria can sap you of energy. Inside a battery, however, it turns out that the right kind of bacteria can cause an energy boost that might be able to help power our lives. That's the finding from researchers in the Netherlands, who've just developed a bacteria-based battery that they were able to charge and discharge 15 times in a row.

The battery combined two technologies. The first is that of a microbial fuel cell in which electricity is produced when electrons are lost by one molecule and gained by another as they undergo an reduction/oxidation (redox) reaction. The second is microbial electrosynthesis, a process in which the electricity produced is converted back into chemicals be be reused in the battery.

In their trials of the battery, which were reported in Environmental Science & Technology Letters, the researchers allowed the battery to charge for 16 hours and then were able to get eight hours of power from it, which mimics the behavior of current solar cells.

The creators of the battery, Sam D. Molenaar, and his colleagues from Wageningen University and Wetsus in the Netherlands believe that, with further optimization, the bacteria-based battery could rival the performance of lithium-ion batteries at a lower cost and with greater safety. One possible application of the batteries would be to store energy from renewable sources such as solar and wind.

Source: American Chemical Society

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