Now, human pee to charge cellphones
Pee power! In a world first, UK scientists claim to have developed a novel method to charge mobile phones - using human urine.
Scientists
working at the Bristol Robotics Laboratory have described the
"breakthrough" finding of charging cell phones using urine as the power
source to generate electricity.
"We are very
excited as this is a world first, no-one has harnessed power from urine
to do this so it's an exciting discovery. Using the ultimate waste
product as a source of power to produce electricity is about as eco as
it gets," Dr Ioannis Ieropoulos from University of the West of England
(UWE), Bristol, an expert at harnessing power from unusual sources using
microbial fuel cells, said.
"One product that
we can be sure of an unending supply is our own urine. By harnessing
this power as urine passes through a cascade of microbial fuel cells
(MFCs), we have managed to charge a mobile phone. The beauty of this
fuel source is that we are not relying on the erratic nature of the wind
or the Sun, we are actually re-using waste to create energy," said
Ieropoulos.
He said so far the microbial fuel
power stack that scientists have developed generates enough power to
enable SMS messaging, web browsing and to make a brief phone call.
"Making
a call on a mobile phone takes up the most energy but we will get to
the place where we can charge a battery for longer periods. The concept
has been tested and it works - it's now for us to develop and refine the
process so that we can develop MFCs to fully charge a battery," he
said.
The Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC) is an
energy converter, which turns organic matter directly into electricity,
via the metabolism of live microorganisms, researchers said.
Essentially,
the electricity is a by-product of the microbes' natural life cycle, so
the more they eat things like urine, the more energy they generate and
for longer periods of time; so it's beneficial to keep doing it, they
said.
The electricity output from MFCs is
relatively small and so far we have only been able to store and
accumulate these low levels of energy into capacitors or
super-capacitors, for short charge/discharge cycles.
This
is the first time we have been able to directly charge the battery of a
device such as a mobile phone and it is indeed a breakthrough,
researchers said.
Scientists believe that the
technology has the future potential to be installed into domestic
bathrooms to harness the urine and produce sufficient electricity to
power showers, lighting or razors as well as mobile phones.
The study was reported in the Royal Society of, 'Chemistry Journal of Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics'.
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