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Is your phone out of juice? Biological fuel cell turns drinks into power.


Using enzymes commonly found in living cells, a new type of fuel cell produces small amounts of electricity from sugar. If the technology becomes viable for mass production, a few drops of your favorite soft drink will be all you need to recharge your cell phone.

In fuel cells, chemical reactions This is the 18th episode of television drama Men in Trees. It originally aired on June 25, 2007 on the TV2 network in New Zealand as a continuation of season 1. Recap
Marin and Cash have a stew cook off, she admits his is better than hers.
 generate electrical currents. The process usually relies on precious metals Precious Metals

Valuable metals such as gold, iridium, palladium, platinum, and silver.

Notes:
Investing in precious metals can be done either by purchasing the physical asset, or by purchasing futures contracts for the particular metal.
, such as platinum, acting as catalysts. In living cells, enzymes perform a similar job, breaking down sugars to extract electrons and produce energy.

When researchers previously used enzymes in fuel cells, they had trouble keeping them humming, says Shelley D. Minteer of St. Louis University. Whereas biological cells continually produce fresh enzymes, there's no mechanism in fuel cells to replace enzymes as they quickly degrade TO DEGRADE, DEGRADING. To, sink or lower a person in the estimation of the public.
     2. As a man's character is of great importance to him, and it is his interest to retain the good opinion of all mankind, when he is a witness, he cannot be compelled to disclose
.

Minteer and Tamara Klotzbach, also of St. Louis University, have now developed polymers that wrap around an enzyme and preserve it in a microscopic pocket. "We tailor these pockets to provide the ideal microenvironment microenvironment /mi·cro·en·vi·ron·ment/ (-en-vi´ron-ment) the environment at the microscopic or cellular level. " for the enzyme, Minteer says.

The polymers keep the enzyme active for months instead of days. In the new fuel cell, tiny polymer bags of enzyme are embedded in a membrane that coats one of the electrodes. When glucose from a sugary sug·ar·y  
adj. sug·ar·i·er, sug·ar·i·est
1. Characterized by or containing sugar: sugary foods.

2. Tasting or looking like sugar.

3.
 liquid penetrates a pocket, the enzyme oxidizes it, releasing electrons and protons. The electrons cross the membrane and enter a wire through which they travel to the other electrode, where they react with oxygen in the atmosphere to produce water. This flow of electrons through the wire constitutes an electrical current that can generate power.

"The elimination of noble metals (Chem.) silver, gold, and platinum; - so called from their resistance to oxidation by air and to dissolution by acids. Copper, mercury, aluminium, palladium, rhodium, iridium, and osmium are sometimes included.

See also: Noble
 is saving cost, but [using enzymes] also widens the range of fuels that can be used," says Paul Kenis Paul Kenis (Bocholt, 11 July 1885-Brussels, 28 July 1934) was a Flemish writer. Education
He attended high school in Turnhout and in Ghent and studied Germanic languages at the University of Ghent.
, a chemical engineer at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Early years: 1867-1880
The Morrill Act of 1862 granted each state in the United States a portion of land on which to establish a major public state university, one which could teach agriculture, mechanic arts, and military training, "without excluding other scientific
.

Enzymatic fuel cells developed by other research groups typically run on more conventional fuels, such as ethanol. Direct use of sugars as fuel would be more energy efficient than fermenting corn, sugarcane, or other crops to turn their sugars into ethanol, Minteer says.

The current version of Minteer's fuel cell oxidizes glucose only partially, so it yields only small amounts of power. "Still," Kenis says, "just getting it to work is a major accomplishment."

Minteer's team is now working to embed a set of different enzymes in its fuel cells to extract more of the sugar's energy.

Another potential advantage of biological fuel cells--compared to ordinary fuel cells or batteries--is that they might become a mass-produced power source that's completely biodegradable, Minteer says.

It could take as little as 3 years to bring the technology into consumer products, Minteer predicts. The U.S. Department of Defense, which is funding the research, is also interested in using sugar as a densely packed energy source on the battlefield.

Klotzbach presented the current work this week at the American Chemical Society The American Chemical Society (ACS) is a learned society (professional association) based in the United States that supports scientific inquiry in the field of chemistry. Founded in 1876 at New York University, the ACS currently has over 160,000 members at all degree-levels and in  meeting in Chicago.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Castelvecchi, D.
Publication:Science News
Date:Mar 31, 2007
Words:472
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