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ENERGY TECH
Temporary battery tattoo turns human sweat into electricity
by Brooks Hays
San Francisco (UPI) Aug 13, 2013


Hemp fibers could power next generation of super-capacitors
San Francisco (UPI) Aug 13, 2013 - With more and more states legalizing medical marijuana, pot's non-psychoactive cousin, industrial hemp, is making a comeback. And some researchers say the plant's fibers could be used to build the next generation of super-capacitors.

Supercapacitors are essentially high performance batteries. They store and release energy to power machines and electronics. But where as traditional batteries can only release energy at a slow and steady drip, supercapacitors can release lots of energy from its storage mechanism all at once -- making them essentially for machines that need lots of power in quick bursts, like the breaking system of an electronic car.

Today's supercapacitors mostly use graphene -- stacks of pure carbon sheet, each one atom thick -- to store and relinquish energy. But researchers and investors think industrial hemp fibers can store and release energy just as well, if not more efficiently, than graphene.

Dr. David Mitlin recently spun a research group at Canada's Alberta University into a business venture called Alta Supercaps. His company wants to develop large scale help-based supercapacitors.

"Obviously hemp can't do all the things graphene can," Mitlin recently told BBC News. "But for energy storage, it works just as well. And it costs a fraction of the price -- $500 to $1,000 a tonne."

Mitlin, who laid out the principles of hemp energy storage in a paper for ACS Nano last year, recently shared his company's ambitions with attendees at the American Chemical Society's annual conference, taking place this week in San Francisco.

"We're past the proof-of-principle stage for the fully functional supercapacitor," Mitlin said. "Now we're gearing up for small-scale manufacturing."

Mitlin says he hopes to develop capacitors for the oil and gas industry, which need energy storage systems that can function at high temperatures.

Scientists continue to unveil impressive innovations at the American Chemical Society's annual conference, currently being held in San Francisco. The latest is a removable tattoo that doubles as a miniature battery -- turning human sweat into storable electricity.

The device is meant to be worn during a trip to the gym. It can monitor a person's progress during exercise routines while simultaneously powering a small electronic device, like an iPod.

The mini tattoo tracks athletic performance by measuring levels of lactate in sweat secreted by the exerciser.

"Lactate is a very important indicator of how you are doing during exercise," explained researcher Wenzhao Jia, in an ACS press release. Jia is one of the engineers from UC San Diego who helped developed the biobattery.

Lactate is a byproduct of a process called glycolysis; the body instigates glycolysis to shore up extra energy when it is overexerted. As a general rule, higher levels of lactate are produced and excreted when the body undergoes more intense levels of exercise. Doctors and physical therapists often measure lactate as a way to test physical fitness. A fit person will likely not produce as high levels of lactate as a less-in-shape person performing the same exercise. Physicians sometimes look for abnormally high lactate levels as a way to identify heart or lung disease.

Currently, lactate testing is done via blood samples. But by installing a lactate sensor in a temporary tattoo, researchers found a way to track performance in a much less evasive way. They also found a way to produce electricity. As the sensor processes the lactate in the sweat, it strips the lactate of electrons.

Engineers designed the sensor so it could pass the stripped electrons from an anode to a cathode, just like a battery.

UC nanoengineering professor Dr. Joseph Wang said the device is "the first example of a biofuel cell that harvests energy from body fluid."

"The current produced is not that high," Jia admitted, "but we are working on enhancing it so that eventually we could power some small electronic devices."

Ultimately engineers could have a device that is powered by -- more or less -- the same thing it measures.

The biobattery presentation by UC San Diego engineers is one of 2,000 projects, studies, products and theories being shared at the ACS conference.

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Related Links
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com






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