Sugar and Herbicide to power future Fuel Cells?

By admin on September 29, 2009 at 6:17 pm

Glucose, the human body’s preferred energy source could someday power our favorite gadgets, cars and even homes! Researchers at Brigham Young University have developed an amazing fuel cell that harvests electricity from glucose and other sugars by using a common herbicide (weed killer) as a catalyst.

Glucose

“Carbohydrates are very energy rich,” said BYU chemistry professor Gerald Watt. “What we needed was a catalyst that would extract the electrons from glucose and transfer them to an electrode.”

The surprising solution turned out to be a common weed killer, as reported by Watt and his colleagues in the October issue of the Journal of The Electrochemical Society. Watt shares his wonderfully appropriate last name with his great-great-uncle James Watt, the inventor of the steam engine.

The effectiveness of this cheap and abundant herbicide is a boon to carbohydrate-based fuel cells. By contrast, hydrogen-based fuel cells like those developed by General Motors require costly platinum as a catalyst.

The study reported experiments that yielded a 29 percent conversion rate, or the transfer of 7 of the 24 available electrons per glucose molecule. The next step for the BYU team is to ramp up the power through design improvements.

“We showed you can get a lot more out of glucose than other people have done before,” said Dean Wheeler, lead faculty author of the paper and a chemical engineering professor in BYU’s Fulton College of Engineering and Technology. “Now we’re trying to get the power density higher so the technology will be more commercially attractive.”

via: http://www.byu.edu

Bookmark and Share

Category: Science | Tags: , , , , ,

1 Response to " Sugar and Herbicide to power future Fuel Cells? "

  1. Rob says:

    Interesting that two things not really good for human life (processed sugar and herbicides) would be a future potential power source.

Leave a Reply