SOLAR DAILY
Scientists create reliable and renewable biological photovoltaic cell
by Staff Writers
Cambridge UK (SPX) May 13, 2022

This system, containing blue-green algae, powered a microprocessor continuously for a year using nothing but ambient light and water.

Researchers have used a widespread species of blue-green algae to power a microprocessor continuously for a year - and counting - using nothing but ambient light and water. Their system has potential as a reliable and renewable way to power small devices.

The system, comparable in size to an AA battery, contains a type of non-toxic algae called Synechocystis that naturally harvests energy from the sun through photosynthesis. The tiny electrical current this generates then interacts with an aluminium electrode and is used to power a microprocessor.

The system is made of common, inexpensive and largely recyclable materials. This means it could easily be replicated hundreds of thousands of times to power large numbers of small devices as part of the Internet of Things. The researchers say it is likely to be most useful in off-grid situations or remote locations, where small amounts of power can be very beneficial.

"The growing Internet of Things needs an increasing amount of power, and we think this will have to come from systems that can generate energy, rather than simply store it like batteries," said Professor Christopher Howe in the University of Cambridge's Department of Biochemistry, joint senior author of the paper.

He added: "Our photosynthetic device doesn't run down the way a battery does because it's continually using light as the energy source."

In the experiment, the device was used to power an Arm Cortex M0+, which is a microprocessor used widely in Internet of Things devices. It operated in a domestic environment and semi-outdoor conditions under natural light and associated temperature fluctuations, and after six months of continuous power production the results were submitted for publication.

The study is published in the journal Energy and Environmental Science.

"We were impressed by how consistently the system worked over a long period of time - we thought it might stop after a few weeks but it just kept going," said Dr Paolo Bombelli in the University of Cambridge's Department of Biochemistry, first author of the paper.

The algae does not need feeding, because it creates its own food as it photosynthesises. And despite the fact that photosynthesis requires light, the device can even continue producing power during periods of darkness. The researchers think this is because the algae processes some of its food when there's no light, and this continues to generate an electrical current.

The Internet of Things is a vast and growing network of electronic devices - each using only a small amount of power - that collect and share real-time data via the internet. Using low-cost computer chips and wireless networks, many billions of devices are part of this network - from smartwatches to temperature sensors in power stations. This figure is expected to grow to one trillion devices by 2035, requiring a vast number of portable energy sources.

The researchers say that powering trillions of Internet of Things devices using lithium-ion batteries would be impractical: it would need three times more lithium than is produced across the world annually. And traditional photovoltaic devices are made using hazardous materials that have adverse environmental effects.

The work was a collaboration between the University of Cambridge and Arm, a company leading the design of microprocessors. Arm Research developed the ultra-efficient Arm Cortex M0+ testchip, built the board, and set up the data-collection cloud interface presented in the experiments.

Research Report:Powering a Microprocessor by Photosynthesis


Related Links
University of Cambridge
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com

SOLAR DAILY
Citizen science for the advancement of solar energy
Barcelona, Spain (SPX) May 12, 2022
A team of researchers uses the experience of a participatory strategy to create and launch Generation Solar, a citizen science initiative for research and innovation in solar energy. Generation Solar has been coordinated by the Science, Communication and Society Study Centre at Pompeu Fabra University (CCS-UPF) within the framework of the European GRECO project ("Fostering a Next Generation of European Photovoltaic Society through Open Science"), led by the Institute of Solar Energy of the Polytechnic U ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

SOLAR DAILY
Ultrathin fuel cell uses the body's own sugar to generate electricity

Mystery solved about active phase in catalytic CO2 reduction to methanol

Using human energy to heat buildings will pay off

Dung power: India taps new energy cash cow

SOLAR DAILY
Robot hives in Israel kibbutz hope to keep bees buzzing

Charting a safe course through a highly uncertain environment

Deadbots can speak for you after your death

Teaching underwater stingray robots to swim faster and with greater precision using machine learning

SOLAR DAILY
Transport drones for offshore wind farms

Lack of marshaling ports hindering offshore wind industry

Favourable breezes boost Spain's wind power sector

Brazil to hold first offshore wind tender by October: official

SOLAR DAILY
Most automakers fall short on climate goals: report

New Zealand to boost electric car sales

On the road to cleaner, greener, and faster driving

Dirty liberal pipe-dream: 3 myths about electric cars

SOLAR DAILY
For plasma with a hot core and cool edges, Super-H mode shows promise

Energy storage critical to deeply decarbonized electricity systems

Electric eels inspired the first battery two centuries ago

MIT expands research collaboration with Commonwealth Fusion Systems

SOLAR DAILY
Russia seeking to wrest seized nuclear plant from Ukraine

Framatome acquires EFINOR group Energy and Defense subsidiaries

Framatome selected to support component modernizations at Forsmark Nuclear Power Plant

Framatome announces launch of Framatome Bulgaria to support long-term services contract

SOLAR DAILY
Canada stumbling in transition to low-carbon economy

EU needs to recycle more to hit green energy goals: report

Paris climate targets feasible if nations keep vows

Lots of low- and no-cost ways to halt global warming

SOLAR DAILY
Why trees aren't a climate change cure-all

Ability of forests to sequester carbon may become more limited

What we're still learning about how trees grow

Brazil firms, NGOs urge Biden to create forest fund