A Binghamton University engineering researcher
designed a biological solar cell that's a million times more effective than
current technology. Preliminary data on Seokheun "Sean" Choi's next
advancement is a thousand times better than that. His cell also works in the
dark, and is self-sustaining.
The new designs don't make biological solar
cells practical, yet. But they do take them out of the realm of
"absurd" and place them squarely in the realm of "someday
soon."
Here's the challenge:
Current photovoltaic
cells generate watts of energy per square centimeter. A solar chip
about the size of your fingernail can power a simple handheld calculator.
Existing biological cells—which use photosynthesis to generate
electricity—produce picowatts per square centimeter—a trillionth of a watt. To
power that same calculator, the cells would stretch 20 meters wide and from
Binghamton to Ireland. Absurd.
Choi's first biological solar cell produces a
million times more energy, microwatts per square centimeter, so the calculator
could operate with a solar panel that fits on a trailer home roof—just 20
meters by 5 meters. His findings were recently published in the Royal Society
of Chemistry's journal Lab on a Chip.
And Choi's latest experiment churns out
milliwatts per square centimeter—reducing the calculator's solar panel to a
backpack-sized 8 inches by 20.
That brings it into the range of practical
application, says Hongseok "Moses" Noh, an engineer and professor at
Drexel University who specializes in lab-on-a-chip technology and applications.
"Milliwatt power should be sufficient to meet those eneeds," Noh
says. "But the device, so far, is too big for hand-held systems,
honestly."
If Choi can reduce the cell to a tenth of its
size while maintaining milliwatt power density, it would be enough to power
hand-held blood analysis devices or air-testing machines. "This is one of
very few miniaturized bio-solar products," Noh says, and it's worth
following Choi's progress.
What makes Choi's approach different? Existing
biological solar
cells use a thin strip of gold or indium
tin oxide as an anode between the bacteria and an air cathode. Not
very efficient, and the bacteria eventually die because they lack air.
Choi uses a carbon anode immersed in the
bacteria-laden fluid—a pretty peridot green in a lab flask. More efficient, and
because the solution has access to air, it's self-sustaining. It also uses the
plant's natural respiration to draw energy from the sugars in the cells to keep
power up even if light is low.
Choi, an assistant professor of electrical and
computer engineering, says he doesn't understand why one form of cyanobacteria
works better than another, or why a mixture of cyanobacteria and heterotrophic
bacteria work even better than a single variety. His last biology class was in
high school.
"I have no idea about microbiology; I
just bought the bacteria and followed the instructions to culture it," he
says. But millions of bacteria species abound, and he plans to experiment to
find the most productive combination.
Or, he suggests, he might work with
bioengineers to develop a bacteria with its photosynthetic engine on the cell's
surface instead of deep in its heart. That would be another order of magnitude
more productive because less energy would be wasted just going from the heart
of the cell to its exterior. He has received seed funding from Binghamton's
Transdisciplinary Area of Excellence in smart energy to continue this work.
Choi says he's confident he'll eventually
reach watt-level energy density, comparable to photovoltaic cells.
"I can get that," he says. "We have room for improvement."
That's a green future alright; be a lot cleaner to use than current solar tech is to produce.
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