The Asian Age

‘ Spacesuits’ protect microbes destined to live in space

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Los Angeles, Oct. 2: Scientists have developed “spacesuits” for bacteria that may allow the microbes to survive space environmen­ts that would otherwise kill them.

The protective suits pair live bacteria with light- absorbing semiconduc­tors in order to capture carbon dioxide and convert it into chemicals that can be used by industry or, someday, in space colonies.

The system, developed by researcher­s at the University of California ( UC) Berkeley in the US, mimics photosynth­esis in plants.

However, while plants capture carbon dioxide and, with the energy from sunlight, convert it to carbohydra­tes that we often eat, the hybrid system captures CO2 and light to make a variety of carbon compounds, depending on the type of bacteria.

The bacteria used in the experiment are anaerobic, which means they are adapted to live in environmen­ts without oxygen.

The suit — a patchwork of mesh- like pieces called a metalorgan­ic framework, or MOF — is impermeabl­e to oxygen and reactive oxygen molecules, like peroxide, which shorten their lifespan.

The hybrid system could be a win- win for industry and the environmen­t: It can capture carbon dioxide emitted by power plants and turn it into useful products.

It also provides a biological way to produce needed chemicals in artificial environmen­ts such as spaceships and habitats on other planets.

The suit — a patchwork of mesh- like pieces called a metalorgan­ic framework, or MOF — is impermeabl­e to oxygen and reactive oxygen molecules, like peroxide, which shorten their lifespan

“We are using our biohybrid to fix CO2 to make fuels, pharmaceut­icals and chemicals, and also nitrogen fixation to make fertiliser,” said Peidong Yang, from UC Berkeley.

Researcher­s developed the hybrid bacterial system over the past five years based on their work on light- absorbing semiconduc­tors such as nanowires: solid wires of silicon a few hundred nanometers across, where a nanometer is a billionth of a meter.

Arrays of nanowires can be used to capture light and generate electricit­y, promising cheap solar cells.

The hybrid system takes advantage of efficient light capture by semiconduc­tors to feed electrons to anaerobic bacteria, which normally scavenge electrons from their environmen­t to live.

The goal is to boost carbon capture by the bacteria to churn out useful carbon compounds.

The suit is made of a MOF mesh that wraps around the bacteria, covering it in patches. Wearing these MOF suits, the bacteria live five times longer at normal oxygen concentrat­ions — 21 per cent by volume — than without suits, Yang said.

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