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Power Biotech Science

Researchers Devise Photosynthesis-Based Energy Source With Negative Carbon Emissions (concordia.ca) 47

Researchers have devised a way to extract energy from the photosynthesis process of algae, according to an announcement from Concordia University.

Suspended in a specialized solution, the algae forms part of a "micro photosynthetic power cell" that can actually generate enough energy to power low-power devices like Internet of Things (IoT) sensors. "Photosynthesis produces oxygen and electrons. Our model traps the electrons, which allows us to generate electricity," [says Kirankumar Kuruvinashetti, PhD 20, now a Mitacs postdoctoral associate at the University of Calgary.] "So more than being a zero-emission technology, it's a negative carbon emission technology: it absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and gives you a current. Its only byproduct is water."

[...] Muthukumaran Packirisamy, professor in the Department of Mechanical, Industrial and Aerospace Engineering and the paper's corresponding author, admits the system is not yet able to compete in power generation with others like photovoltaic cells. The maximum possible terminal voltage of a single micro photosynthetic power cell is only 1.0V. But he believes that, with enough research and development, including artificial intelligence-assisted integration technologies, this technology has the potential to be a viable, affordable and clean power source in the future.

It also offers significant manufacturing advantages over other systems, he says. "Our system does not use any of the hazardous gases or microfibres needed for the silicon fabrication technology that photovoltaic cells rely on. Furthermore, disposing of silicon computer chips is not easy. We use biocompatible polymers, so the whole system is easily decomposable and very cheap to manufacture."

In the paper the researchers also described it as a âoemicrobial fuel cellâ...
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Researchers Devise Photosynthesis-Based Energy Source With Negative Carbon Emissions

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  • Yeah no (Score:4, Informative)

    by stevenm86 ( 780116 ) on Monday June 17, 2024 @03:51AM (#64554667)
    Check your stoichiometry. If the only byproduct is water, how can this be carbon-negative? If the carbon is absorbed from the atmosphere, what happens to the carbon? It's either "converted to energy" (it's certainly not), or is transformed into another atom through fusion/fission (it's not), or it's emitted as a carbon-containing compound. There's no other option.

    Maybe the only non-gaseous emission is water (in the form of water vapor) but that would make their statement misleading.

    Another possibility is the carbon is absorbed by the algae, but that will be re-emitted when the cells die, so that's delaying the inevitable at best. This is also why planting more trees doesn't help with carbon sequestration - the dead trees will rot and emit CO2. I believe existing coal deposits were formed by trees that predated the bacteria that converted cellulose back into CO2. There's lots of other benefits to planting a tree (or growing algae) but permanent carbon capture is not one of them.
    • Re:Yeah no (Score:5, Interesting)

      by DrMrLordX ( 559371 ) on Monday June 17, 2024 @04:11AM (#64554703)

      In the case of a contained bioreactor, the byproduct would be carbon-rich solids (e.g. more algae) which can easily be buried or otherwise sequestered after the end of the useful life of the bioreactor.

      The real questions are: how long can a bioreactor work before you've got to clean the thing out and start over from scratch? How expensive is that process? Can you reuse the biomass without having to dump it?

      • In the case of a contained bioreactor, the byproduct would be carbon-rich solids (e.g. more algae) which can easily be buried or otherwise sequestered after the end of the useful life of the bioreactor.

        The real questions are: how long can a bioreactor work before you've got to clean the thing out and start over from scratch? How expensive is that process? Can you reuse the biomass without having to dump it?

        What happens if it gets away from us? Do we want a presumptive carbon negative Algae spread all over the earth? Whatever could go wrong?

        • I'm going to assume the best: you're going for funny with this.

          There's a lot of people that won't see that, and opt to flame you instead.

          • I'm going to assume the best: you're going for funny with this.

            There's a lot of people that won't see that, and opt to flame you instead.

            The flamers might consider reading about the Great Oxidation crisis https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] I'm a real Cassandra, so no one likes what I have to say sometimes.

            Bears a bit of similarity to what these folk are trying to do. Just a difference between creating Oxygen or removing CO2. Cassandra me, no doubt - after all, I get people pissed when I say we don't want a thousand years of Acid Rain, in one of their wonderful fixes of injecting sulfuric acid forming Sulfates into the air. So people migh

          • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

            Seems your assumption was too generous.

    • Yeah no (Score:5, Interesting)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday June 17, 2024 @07:17AM (#64554965) Homepage Journal

      This is also why planting more trees doesn't help with carbon sequestration - the dead trees will rot and emit CO2.

      This, sir, is bullshit. Not your conclusion, which is true; the dead trees will decompose and emit CO2, yes. But they will not release all of their carbon, and therefore planting more trees DOES help with carbon sequestration. When trees decompose aerobically, most of the CO2 is sequestered. It winds up in the soil. It's only when they decompose anaerobically that most of the sequestered carbon is released. This is why rainforests typically do not do much carbon sequestration — the rate of death and decomposition is high enough and the terrain wet enough that most of the decomposition is anaerobic.

      By the same token, if we aerate algae as we compost it, most of the carbon will be retained in the compost. Another option is to use the algae to make biofuels, which would then be carbon neutral.

      There is a real and salient objection to be made to this technology: What are the cradle to grave carbon emissions? You still have to make the devices, you have to clean and otherwise maintain them, etc. Telling me only about the operating conditions doesn't give me all the information I need to make an informed decision. However, I'm at least still starting off in a better place than people who don't think carbon is sequestered by trees.

      • This is why rainforests typically do not do much carbon sequestration â" the rate of death and decomposition is high enough and the terrain wet enough that most of the decomposition is anaerobic.

        Sort of. Rain forests don't sequester much carbon because they are nutrient poor. They are nutrient poor because they drain very well (see the Amazon river). Hence the need for the indigenous people to ammend [wikipedia.org] the soil in order to farm it. If you want anerobic conditions, go find a peat bog. The operative term being "bog", i.e. poorly drained.

      • the dead trees will decompose and emit CO2, yes. But they will not release all of their carbon, and therefore planting more trees DOES help with carbon sequestration.

        As always, it's a bit more complicated than that. Yes - dead trees > > coal. but far more important in terms of tonnage then coals (sedimentary rocks with about 60% or higher w/w of carbon) is the 1~2% w/w of carbon present in most fine-grained sediments ("mudrocks" - which if you've got an electron microscope you can meaningfully separat

        • Well, what I want it to do is build soil, since we've lost a lot of it to erosion after fires here in northern California. Keeping the soil is the most important thing for regrowth of forests, but building more is the next best. But I want it to build carbon-rich soil, for multiple reasons. I'm thinking a little more short-term, ha ha.

          • Rebuilding or repairing damaged/ eroded soils is a perfectly laudable aim, But since soils typically have half-lives of many centuries to upwards of a milennium, it's probably a good idea to do it right, the first time. And that is complex, because soils are complex.

            When I did Soil Science (back in the 80s, when the country actually had a whole 3 university Departments of Soil Science ; there aren't any now, TTBOMK), the "poster child" of "why S.Sci. is important" was continuing efforts to repair the damag

      • Oh I see. Thank you! That makes sense.
    • by methano ( 519830 )
      I think you missed the point. This is the same as planting a tree except that they can draw a current. The current is the big thing. The increased biomass that is no longer in the air is a minor positive side effect. I'm suspect the electrical output is not gonna be worth the effort, but it makes the kind of headline that we all start our day with.
    • by Ubi_NL ( 313657 )

      Indeed the summary is either really dumb, or the researchers do not understand their own methods.

      This method copies the light reaction of photosynthesis. There is no water as byproduct. Quite the opposite: water is the input from which oxygen (and H+ and electrons) is derived.

      In algae, the CO2 is sequestered in the subsequent dark reaction of photosynthesis, which also consumes energy (NADPH, ATP) that is created in the light reaction. The dark reaction is a complex chemical cycle that does not produce any

    • Dude. It's a plant.

      The carbon is captured by the plant life, to make more plant life.

      How the hell did you not get that from it being ALGAE doing the work here?

      • Because when the plant dies, it rots. And when it rots, all the carbon it captured is turned back into CO2.
        • So you think that 100% of the carbon will somehow be emitted as atmospheric CO2, and there's absolutely no way to prevent that?

          Never heard of petrified trees? Or the idea that this is a machine that will have maintenance cycles, and part of that maintenance may be removing carbon build-up periodically and dealing with it in a way that isn't conducive to open-air rot and methane production, such as vacuum sealing, limestone creation, or even cooking at high temperatures in an oxygen depleted environment to

          • Petrified trees are a nonrenewable resource. The trees rot before they get an opportunity to end up in an anaerobic environment. Virtually all coal comes from a 60M year period during which bacteria had not yet evolved to digest cellulose.
            • Great. Cherry picking one thing without speaking to any of the other mechanisms that took 5 seconds to think of means there is no argument against them, and therefore the complaint of "all the carbon it captured is turned back into CO2" is without merit.

  • by nanoakron ( 234907 ) on Monday June 17, 2024 @03:57AM (#64554677)

    Don't worry guys, they're going to use AI to solve all their problems.

    5 years ago they would have used blockchain, but AI will definitely help now!

    • by stooo ( 2202012 ) on Monday June 17, 2024 @03:58AM (#64554681) Homepage

      Use BlockchaiAI

      • > Use BlockchainAI

        Dude, why did you leave out quantum.

        Also it takes CARBON out of the atmosphere but it makes pure water. WIthout needing any energy. So it's like a thousand times better than desalinization AND adds to our oceans. Also the water it produces is cold (not a thing) which means it reduces the energy in the water it's added to (wait, so that's how it's powered) an all of this is good.

        To summarize: Don't worry about TaySway's jet, all those 18 wheelers, trains, cars, power plants and anyth

    • Think you are burying your head in the sand if you think AI is like BlockChain. Treating it like that is going to help you go the way of Circuit City, Borders, Blockbuster and all of the other companies that thought the Internet is just a fad. Forget the ChatGPT and deep fake generators. There are really scary things happening across the board. Look closely at the recent layoffs in HiTech and “knowledge heavy” industries like banking, insurance, etc. In Manufacturing, look closely at the number

  • If you go comparing it to photovoltaics, thereby inducing certain expectations in the reader, you ought to also tell us how it compares in the amount of space it needs to provide an equivalent output.

    I understand that we don't compare costs for a proof of concept in relation to an established multi billion dollar industry product... but come on...

    • The summary, at least, didn't give ANY efficiency figures. And made some impossible (without extensive caveats) claims. The basic idea is reasonable, and probably real, but I doubt you could (efficiently) extract enough electricity to even monitor the process. Outside of the electricity and "impossible claims", this happened in my grandfather's cattle watering tank. So I wonder what they're really doing (as opposed to what the reporter heard).

  • Very positive development. It will now eliminate the remorse associated with producing, buying, and throwing away more plastic crap designed to enable you to perform mundane activities at the swipe of a finger.
  • Slashcode will demand some "comment" text, but the Subject line really contains all that is necessary.
  • So, they invented plants? I believe there is prior art.

  • So, absorbing something is now considered negatively emitting it? What kind of BS wordplay is this?
  • by Don'tJoin ( 6185656 ) on Tuesday June 18, 2024 @02:22AM (#64557283)

    I think they miss a m or u before the V. Because if they get a whole Volt out of one unit of one microcell, that has a huge potential (pun intended).

    Stack 5 of them and you can run an arduino. They did forget to mention anything about current though, I guess the Amperage aint that good.

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