Stanford researchers find electrical current stemming from plants

April 13, 2010

In an electrifying first, Stanford scientists have plugged in to algae cells and harnessed a tiny electric current. They found it at the very source of energy production - photosynthesis, a plant's method of converting sunlight to chemical energy. It may be a first step toward generating "high efficiency" bioelectricity that doesn't give off carbon dioxide as a byproduct, the researchers say.

"We believe we are the first to extract electrons out of living plant cells," said WonHyoung Ryu, the lead author of the paper published in the March issue of . Ryu conducted the experiments while he was a research associate for mechanical engineering professor Fritz Prinz.

The Stanford research team developed a unique, ultra-sharp nanoelectrode made of gold, specially designed for probing inside cells. They gently pushed it through the algal cell membranes, which sealed around it, and the cell stayed alive. From the photosynthesizing cells, the electrode collected electrons that had been energized by light and the researchers generated a tiny electric current.

"We're still in the scientific stages of the research," said Ryu. "We were dealing with single cells to prove we can harvest the electrons."

Plants use photosynthesis to convert to , which is stored in the bonds of sugars they use for food. The process takes place in chloroplasts, the cellular powerhouses that make sugars and give leaves and algae their green color. In the chloroplasts, water is split into oxygen, protons and electrons. Sunlight penetrates the chloroplast and zaps the electrons to a high energy level, and a protein promptly grabs them. The electrons are passed down a series of proteins, which successively capture more and more of the electrons' energy to synthesize sugars until all the electron's energy is spent.

In this experiment, the researchers intercepted the electrons just after they had been excited by light and were at their highest energy levels. They placed the gold electrodes in the chloroplasts of algae cells, and siphoned off the electrons to generate the tiny electrical current.

The result, the researchers say, is electricity production that doesn't release carbon into the atmosphere. The only byproducts of are protons and oxygen.

"This is potentially one of the cleanest energy sources for energy generation," Ryu said. "But the question is, is it economically feasible?"

Ryu said they were able to draw from each cell just one picoampere, an amount of electricity so tiny that they would need a trillion cells photosynthesizing for one hour just to equal the amount of energy stored in a AA battery. In addition, the cells die after an hour. Ryu said tiny leaks in the membrane around the electrode could be killing the cells, or they may be dying because they're losing out on energy they would normally use for their own life processes. One of the next steps would be to tweak the design of the electrode to extend the life of the cell, Ryu said.

Harvesting electrons this way would be more efficient than burning biofuels, as most plants that are burned for fuel ultimately store only about 3 to 6 percent of available solar energy, Ryu said. His process bypasses the need for combustion, which only harnesses a portion of a plant's stored energy. Electron harvesting in this study was about 20 percent efficient. Ryu said it could theoretically reach 100 percent efficiency one day. (Photovoltaic solar cells are currently about 20-40-percent efficient.)

Possible next steps would be to use a plant with larger chloroplasts for a larger collecting area, and a bigger that could capture more . With a longer-lived plant and better collecting ability, they could scale up the process, Ryu said. Ryu is now a professor at Yonsei University in Seoul, South Korea.

More information: Paper: http://pubs.acs.or … 21/nl903141j

Provided by Stanford University (news : web)

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LariAnn
Apr 13, 2010

Rank: 3 / 5 (1)
How about engineering a plant cell that produces an excess of electrons beyond what it needs to grow and multiply, so the electrons can be drawn off without killing the cells prematurely? It's not hard to envisage a real "power plant" that we would grow in our yards and hook up to for low voltage applications.
DaveGee
Apr 13, 2010

Rank: 1 / 5 (2)
Here they go with those crackpot OU claims... won't it ever stop?!?! ;-)
stealthc
Apr 13, 2010

Rank: 3 / 5 (1)
how about changing this protein to instead act like a conduit to transmit a fraction of the energy to the edge of the cell, so that you neither have to puncture the cell membrane nor steal all of it's food.
El_Nose
Apr 13, 2010

Rank: 4 / 5 (2)
but plants do release carbon into the atmosphere -- they do this naturally -- to create energy they use CO2 and to metabolize sugar they use O2 and release CO2. Every thing on the planet except those new exotic aneobic species use sugar or ATP in the exact same fashion except plants can create their own food.
Thex1138
Apr 13, 2010

Rank: not rated yet
Copper-top algae...
Bloodoflamb
Apr 13, 2010

Rank: not rated yet
Stemming... Oh how I love puns.
taisha99
Apr 14, 2010

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
WHat rubbish. Photosynthesis is not especially efficient. It 'locks' up CO2 by turning it into sugars.
The potential developed across the chloroplast membrane drives this process. If the potential is 'stolen' then the plant can't photosynthesise (The clue in in the name :)).
Plant cell respiration gives of CO2 but that process occurs in the mitochondria. They develop an membrane potential (like the chloroplast) and use it to drive ATP synthesis.
I wonder if these researchers looked at the huge amount of research that has gone into photosythetic processes.
Bob_B
Apr 18, 2010

Rank: not rated yet
Beyond the controversy, I'd learned that plants breath CO2 and releases O2. Now, it seems there is a "part" of the plant that releases CO2. How much of it is what was breathed in? How much is "new"?
nevdka
Apr 20, 2010

Rank: not rated yet
What about running it in reverse and injecting charge? It's a potential non-food crop path to biofuels.

...would they still count as biofuels if you make them from nuclear power?
Rank 4.8 /5 (15 votes)
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