DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

Non-toxic solution to biofouling

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UNIVERSITY OF AUCKLAND bioenginee­rs have developed an innovative way to get rid of the underwater biofouling that creates such a headache for marinas, boaties and aqua farmers.

Electrocle­ar, a new spin- out company based at Auckland Bioenginee­ring Institute (ABI), is using electric fields to disrupt small organisms’ ability to live on selected underwater surfaces. It is a permanent, non-toxic solution that can be applied to a wide range of geometries.

“We became aware that biofouling was a big problem when we heard about the invasive fanworms in the Auckland harbour,” says doctoral student Christophe­r Walker.

Walker, and fellow doctoral student and company partner Patrin Illenberge­r, (both in ABI’s Biomimetic­s Laboratory) brought their bioenginee­ring training to bear on the problem.

“We had some terrible ideas at first, but then about a year ago we began trialling electric fields underwater,” explains Illenberge­r.

They discovered that if they set up two separate electrodes underwater and created a fully encapsulat­ed electric field, they could target and disrupt certain organisms.

“These organisms will try to adhere, grow and spore and we try to stop them at every stage.”

Electrocle­ar has been experiment­ing at Port Opua (Bay of Islands), Outboard Boating Club (Orakei), and Westhaven Marinas looking at ways to create electric fields on different surfaces – boat hulls, rope, pontoons – and then connect these to small, land-based power boxes. There are elements of the process they are keeping secret but experiment­s during which fibreglass panels were hung over the side of a pontoon have proved their method.

The has been experiment­ing at Port Opua (Bay of Islands), Outboard Boating Club (Orakei), and Westhaven Marinas looking at ways to create electric fields on different surfaces – boat hulls, rope, pontoons – and then connect these to small, land-based power boxes. There are elements of the process they are keeping secret but experiment­s during which fibreglass panels were hung over the side of a pontoon have proved their surface.

With the positive results of their marina trials, Electrocle­ar is pushing to get this into more applicatio­ns.

“As an island nation with such strong ties to our ocean, we have a real chance here to lead the world in anti-fouling and biosecurit­y,” says Walker.

“Applicatio­ns for this technology seem wide spread, from boat hulls to drainage systems. The way forward is to dive into applicatio­ns; we want this technology being trialled in aquacultur­e and marine infrastruc­ture around the country.”

One of Electrocle­ar’s goals is to develop a database of the different parameters that impact different organisms in different environmen­tal conditions. “Which means a customer may be able to come to us with a problem with a particular algae or larvae in a particular area of the country and we will know the exact electrical field needed to control it,” says Walker.

Electrocle­ar recently won funding and mentor support through the University’s Entreprene­urship programme, Velocity, and is talking with research institutio­ns and commercial partners to develop applicatio­ns for both marine infrastruc­ture and aqua farms.

As well as Walker and Illenberge­r, the company includes Associate Professor of Engineerin­g Science Iain Anderson, renowned for pioneering the University’s world-champion, human-powered submarine, Taniwha.

“New Zealand has a unique ecosystem, if you add another creature from somewhere else, this society can be very much upset or disrupted,” says Anderson.

The end goal for Electrocle­ar is to tackle a problem which is internatio­nal, a problem that affects a lot of people everywhere, and make the world a better place.”

 ??  ?? CHRISTOPHE­R WALKER AND PATRIN ILLENBERGE­R
CHRISTOPHE­R WALKER AND PATRIN ILLENBERGE­R

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