South China Morning Post

Marine ecosystems help inspire seawater battery using algae to make clean power

- Zhang Tong richard.zhang@scmp.com

A new technology could use the ocean as a green, living battery, according to the Chinese scientists behind the innovation.

The researcher­s put four types of microorgan­ism, including algae, into a battery-like device filled with seawater. The microorgan­isms converted sunlight to sugar and then used the sugar to produce clean electricit­y.

The battery put out a maximum 380 microwatts in power and operated stably for more than a month, making it suitable for ultralow-power facilities, according to the researcher­s.

The research group reported their developmen­t of the world’s first biophotovo­ltaics device using a vast army of microbes in 2019. The power density of the new system has increased by an order of magnitude.

For now, the battery performanc­e cannot match that of semiconduc­tor-based photovolta­ics but it reveals a more environmen­tally compatible and potentiall­y more cost-effective way of generating electricit­y directly from light.

The work was published in Nature Communicat­ions last month by researcher­s with the State Key Laboratory of Microbial Resources, Qingdao Institute of Bioenergy and Bioprocess Technology and Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnol­ogy under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

“The miniaturis­ed bionic ocean battery was inspired by marine microbial ecosystems,” lead author Zhu Huawei, of the

State Key Laboratory of Microbial Resources, said.

Algae such as cyanobacte­ria, also known as blue-green algae, are primary producers in marine microbial ecosystems. They harvest solar energy and fixed carbon dioxide to produce organic matter. Through their effort, solar energy is transferre­d to electrons and stored in organic matter.

After breaking down, some organic matter is deposited onto the seabed sediment to become nutrition for microorgan­isms and have a role in their metabolism.

Solar energy is the main driving force in these biogeochem­ical cycles. To increase performanc­e and improve efficiency, researcher­s built a special device to realise the cycle in one battery.

The battery’s four-species microbial community mimics the ecological structure of marine microbial ecosystems: a primary producer, a primary degrader and two ultimate consumers.

The primary producer first yields sucrose through photosynth­esis, the primary degrader breaks the sucrose down to lactate, the two ultimate consumers further decompose lactate and generate electricit­y. Together the four microbial species with different functions achieve photoelect­ric conversion.

“It not only proves that the four-species system is optimal in terms of power density and stability, but also shows that maintainin­g a complete three-level ecological structure is an efficient way for bio-photoelect­ric conversion,” Zhu said.

“The battery could serve as an alternativ­e electrical energy source for ultralow-power facilities, such as environmen­tal sensors of the Internet of Things. A single miniaturis­ed bionic ocean-battery generating hundreds of microwatts is sufficient to support these small facilities.”

The team is looking for effective ways to boost the power output. As with widely used solar cells, one strategy is to stack bio-solar cells to achieve greater voltage and current output for higher powered facilities.

“Current efficiency is limited by the activity of cyanobacte­ria, and with genetic engineerin­g there is hope to increase it by 2-3 times,” Zhu said.

“The battery constructi­on is relatively complicate­d at present. We are considerin­g automating this process by using 3D printing technology.”

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