Thinkstock
Solar cell

Navy Researchers Develop Fuel Cell Driven by Sunlight and Microorganisms

July 6, 2017
A fuel cell could work for thousands of hours creating electricity before new fuel is needed.

Engineers at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory’s Center for Biomolecular Science and Engineering recently patented a self-assembling, self-repairing, and self-contained microbial photoelectrochemical solar cell driven entirely by sunlight and microorganisms. The solar microbial fuel cell (SMFC) is a non-semiconductor-based device which uses microorganisms to generate electric power by photosynthetically replenishing reactants using sunlight.

The SMFC reactants (glucose and oxygen) are regenerated inside the cell by a group of photosynthetic microbes whose reactants, carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O), are produced in the fuel cell. This interdependency lets the device generate electricity for many thousands of hours needing the reactants replaced.

“Natural photosynthetic systems, such as trees and algae blooms, self-repair—a property that makes them highly durable,” says Lenny Tender, research chemist at the Center. “For this device, we incorporate photosynthetic organisms into the self-assembling and self-maintaining fuel cell to make durable land-based photoelectrochemical solar cells.

“Microorganisms harvested from sea water in shallow coastal environments, in relatively low abundance, are enriched when the cell is sealed due to accumulation of carbon dioxide and depletion of oxygen,” Tender continues. “These organisms use sunlight to convert the electrode products to glucose and oxygen, which can be re-used in the electrode reactions, eliminating the need for a constant flux of new glucose and oxygen.”

Tender says the SMFC also combines energy storage with power delivery. So when there is plenty of sunlight, photosynthesis leads to production of fuel and oxidant. Some of this is used to generate power immediately, with the remainder stored to be used later when there is no sunlight. This will ideally done without the need for capacitors or batteries.

The SMFC can be “stacked” in series to increase voltage and can power any device that currently uses a conventional photovoltaic power supply. However, work is underway to understand limiting factors.

Sponsored Recommendations

Drive systems for urban air mobility

March 18, 2025
The shift of some of our transport traffic from the road to the air through urban air mobility is one of the most exciting future fields in the aerospace industry.

Blazing the trail for flying robots

March 18, 2025
Eight Bachelor students built a flying manipulator that can hover in any orientation and grasp objects. The drone is even more maneuverable than a quadrocopter and was designed...

Reachy 2: The Open-Source Humanoid Robot Redefining Human-Machine Interaction

March 18, 2025
Reachy 2 was designed to adapt to a wide variety of uses thanks to its modular architecture.

maxon IDX: The plug-and-play solution

March 18, 2025
IDX drives combine power with small space requirements - a brushless BLDC motor combined with an EPOS4 positioning controller and a gearhead inside a high-quality industrial housing...

Voice your opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Machine Design, create an account today!