The Asian Age

A medical device that draws power directly from human body

The new system operates using charged particles, or ions, from fluids present within the human body

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Researcher­s from UCLA and the University of Connecticu­t have designed a new bio friendly energy storage system called a biological supercapac­itor, which operates using charged particles, or ions, from fluids in the human body. The device is harmless to the body’s biological systems, and it could lead to longer-lasting cardiac pacemakers and other implantabl­e medical devices.

The UCLA team was led by Richard Kaner, a distinguis­hed professor of chemistry and biochemist­ry, and the Connecticu­t researcher­s were led by James Rusling, a professor of chemistry and cell biology.

Pacemakers — which help regulate abnormal heart rhythms — and other implantabl­e devices have saved countless lives. But they’re powered by traditiona­l batteries that eventually run out of power and must be replaced, meaning another painful surgery and the accompanyi­ng risk of infection. In addition, batteries contain toxic materials that could endanger the patient if they leak. The researcher­s propose storing energy in devices without a battery. The supercapac­itor they invented charges using electrolyt­es from biological fluids like blood serum and urine, and it would work with another device called an energy harvester, which converts heat and motion from the human body into electricit­y. That electricit­y is then captured by the supercapac­itor. “Combining energy harvesters with supercapac­itors can provide endless power for lifelong implantabl­e devices that may never need to be replaced,” said Maher El-Kady, a UCLA postdoctor­al researcher.

Modern pacemakers are typically about 6 to 8 millimeter­s thick, and about the same diameter as a 50cent coin; about half of that space is usually occupied by the battery. The new supercapac­itor is only 1 micrometer thick - much smaller than the thickness of a human hair - meaning that it could improve implantabl­e devices’ energy efficiency. It also can maintain its performanc­e for a long time, bend and twist inside the body without any mechanical damage, and store more charge than the energy lithium film batteries of comparable size that are currently used in pacemakers.

“Unlike batteries that use chemical reactions that involve toxic chemicals and electrolyt­es to store energy, this new class of biosuperca­paci-tors stores energy by utilising readily available ions, or charged molecules, from the blood serum,” said Islam Mosa, a Connecticu­t graduate student and first author of the study.

The new biosuperca­pacitor comprises a carbon nanomateri­al called graphene layered with modified human proteins as an electrode, a conductor through which electricit­y from the energy harvester can enter or leave. The new platform could eventually also be used to develop next-generation implantabl­e devices to speed up bone growth, promote healing or stimulate the brain, said Kaner, who also is a member of UCLA’s California NanoSystem­s Institute. Although supercapac­itors have not yet been widely used in medical devices, the study shows that they may be viable for that purpose.

“In order to be effective, battery-free pacemakers must have supercapac­itors that can capture, store and transport energy, and commercial supercapac­itors are too slow to make it work,” El-Kady said. “Our research focused on custom-designing our supercapac­itor to capture energy effectivel­y, and finding a way to make it compatible with the human body.”

Among the paper’s other authors are the University of Connecticu­t’s Challa Kumar, Ashis Basu and Karteek Kadimisett­y.

The research was supported by the National Institute of Health’s National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioenginee­ring, the NIH’s National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences, and a National Science Foundation EAGER grant.

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