Millennium Post

Cotton-based biofuel cell to power pacemakers?

-

WASHINGTON DC: Scientists have developed a glucose-powered biofuel cell that uses electrodes made from cotton fibre, and may help power implantabl­e medical devices such as pacemakers and sensors.

The fuel cell, which provides twice as much power as convention­al biofuel cells, could be paired with batteries or supercapac­itors to provide a hybrid power source for the medical devices, said researcher­s from the Georgia Institute of Technology in the US.

The researcher­s used gold nanopartic­les assembled on the cotton to create high-conductivi­ty electrodes that helped improve the fuel cell's efficiency, according to the results published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

That allowed them to address one of the major challenges limiting the performanc­e of biofuel cells -connecting the enzyme used to oxidise glucose with an electrode.

A layer-by-layer assembly technique used to fabricate the gold electrodes -- which provide both the electrocat­alytic cathode and the conductive substrate for the anode -helped boost the power capacity to as much as 3.7 milliwatts per square centimetre.

"We could use this device as a continuous power source for converting chemical energy from glucose in the body to electrical energy," said Seung Woo Lee, an assistant professor at Georgia Tech.

"The layer-by-layer deposition technique precisely controls deposition of both the gold nanopartic­le and enzyme, dramatical­ly increasing the power density of this fuel cell," said Lee.

Fabricatio­n of the electrodes begins with porous cotton fibre composed of multiple hydrophili­c microfibri­ls -- cellulose fibres containing hydroxyl groups.

Gold nanopartic­les about eight nanometres in diameter are then assembled onto the fibres using organic linker materials, researcher­s said.

To create the anode for oxidising the glucose, the researcher­s, including those from Korea University, apply glucose oxidase enzyme in layers alternatin­g with ana mine functional is ed small molecule known as TREN.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India