EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE
ACS News Service Weekly PressPac: August 25, 2010
Juicing up laptops and cell phones with soda pop or vegetable oil
Embargoed for release: Wednesday, August 25, 9:45 a.m., Eastern Time
Scientists today reported development of a new battery-like device that opens the possibility that people one day could 鈥渞echarge鈥� cell phones, laptops, and other portable electronics in an unlikely way 鈥� with a sugar fix from a shared sip of soda pop or even a dose of vegetable oil. They described the device, the first fuel cell that produces electricity with technology borrowed from the biological powerhouses that energize people and other living things on Earth, here at the 240th National Meeting of the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网 (ACS).
鈥淭his is the first demonstration of a new class of biofuel cells,鈥� said Shelley Minteer, Ph.D., who presented the report. 鈥淲hen further developed, these devices have the potential for replacing disposable and rechargeable batteries in a wide variety of consumer electronics and other products. It is the first such device based on one of the microscopic parts of the billions upon billions of cells that make up the body.鈥� For the new biofuel cell, Minteer and colleagues chose one of the most amazing organelles: the mitochondria.
Sometimes called the cell鈥檚 own powerhouses, mitochondria transform the calories in food into chemical energy that the body needs to sustain life. Mitochondria use a chemical formed from the digestion of sugar and fats, called pyruvate, to make another substance called ATP (adenosine triphosphate), which stores energy until needed. Minteer and colleagues described the development and successful lab testing of the first mitochondria fuel cell. The device consists of a thin layer of mitochondria sandwiched between two electrodes, including a gas-permeable electrode. Tests showed that it produced electricity using sugar or cooking oil byproducts as fuel.
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