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Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumScentists Infuse Cement With Bacteria to Create Living Energy Device (Gizmodo)
https://gizmodo.com/scientists-infuse-cement-with-bacteria-to-create-living-energy-device-2000657611Microbes are known for their remarkable survival abilities. And now, scientists have discovered another remarkable trait: Turning cement into an electricity storage device.
In a study published September 9 in Cell Reports Physical Science, researchers at Aarhus University in Denmark describe how they seeded a bacteria called Shewanella oneidensis into cement. These particular bacteria are known to be good at transferring electrons across surfaces, and the researchers wondered if they could act as an energy transporter in cement.
Indeed, the cement came to life, with the bacteria establishing a network of charge carriers capable of both storing and releasing electrical energy, the researchers explained in a statement. In other words, the cement could store and release electricity, a finding that could one day enable more sustainable buildings. Even better, the researchers found that even after the microbes died, the material could be reinvigorated by being fed nutrients.
-snip-
The resulting material produces a hefty load of energy, the researchers saideven under stress. For instance, one stress test involved putting the cement in extreme temperature environments, which it endured with ease. And when the researchers connected six blocks of the cement, the structure generated enough power to switch on an LED light.
-snip-
In a study published September 9 in Cell Reports Physical Science, researchers at Aarhus University in Denmark describe how they seeded a bacteria called Shewanella oneidensis into cement. These particular bacteria are known to be good at transferring electrons across surfaces, and the researchers wondered if they could act as an energy transporter in cement.
Indeed, the cement came to life, with the bacteria establishing a network of charge carriers capable of both storing and releasing electrical energy, the researchers explained in a statement. In other words, the cement could store and release electricity, a finding that could one day enable more sustainable buildings. Even better, the researchers found that even after the microbes died, the material could be reinvigorated by being fed nutrients.
-snip-
The resulting material produces a hefty load of energy, the researchers saideven under stress. For instance, one stress test involved putting the cement in extreme temperature environments, which it endured with ease. And when the researchers connected six blocks of the cement, the structure generated enough power to switch on an LED light.
-snip-
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Scentists Infuse Cement With Bacteria to Create Living Energy Device (Gizmodo) (Original Post)
highplainsdem
Thursday
OP
underpants
(192,893 posts)1. Interesting. I had no idea.
Native
(7,239 posts)2. very cool!
wcmagumba
(4,660 posts)3. Cool, hope it leads to a good use...I actually remember reading about this a year or so back...
Work in process...
NNadir
(36,578 posts)4. The idea that storing energy is a laudable activity when fossil fuels dominate primary energy supplies...
...is ill conceived.
The problem we face has everything to do with primary energy and very little to do with storing energy.
The manufacture of cement is a major driver of carbon dioxide release.