Institute of Physics
A practical, ecological fashion statement: A urine operated MFC is pictured. Credit: Copyright UWE Bristol / loannis leropoulos |
A pair of socks embedded with miniaturised microbial fuel cells
(MFCs) and fuelled with urine pumped by the wearer's footsteps has powered a
wireless transmitter to send a signal to a PC.
This is the first
self-sufficient system powered by a wearable energy generator based on
microbial fuel cell technology.
The scientific paper, 'Self-sufficient Wireless Transmitter
Powered by Foot-pumped Urine Operating Wearable MFC' is published in Bioinspiration
and Biomimetics.
The paper describes a lab-based experiment led by Professor
Ioannis Ieropoulos, of the Bristol BioEnergy Centre at the University of the
West of England (UWE Bristol).
The Bristol BioEnergy Centre is based in Bristol
Robotics Laboratory, a collaborative partnership between the University of the West
of England (UWE Bristol) and the University of Bristol.
Soft MFCs embedded within a pair of socks was supplied with
fresh urine, circulated by the human operator walking. Normally,
continuous-flow MFCs would rely on a mains powered pump to circulate the urine
over the microbial fuel cells, but this experiment relied solely on human
activity.
Professor Ieropoulos says, "Having already powered a mobile
phone with MFCs using urine as fuel, we wanted to see if we could replicate
this success in wearable technology. We also wanted the system to be entirely
self-sufficient, running only on human power -- using urine as fuel and the
action of the foot as the pump."
"This work opens up possibilities of using waste for
powering portable and wearable electronics. For example, recent research shows
it should be possible to develop a system based on wearable MFC technology to
transmit a person's coordinates in an emergency situation. At the same time
this would indicate proof of life since the device will only work if the
operator's urine fuels the MFCs."
Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) use bacteria to generate electricity
from waste fluids. They tap into the biochemical energy used for microbial
growth and convert it directly into electricity. This technology can use any
form of organic waste and turn it into useful energy without relying on fossil
fuels, making this a valuable green technology.
The Centre has recently launched a prototype urinal in
partnership with Oxfam that uses pee-power technology to light cubicles in
refugee camps.