Cybernetics News
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to CyberneticsNews.com RSS Feed Subscribe
New Articles
Researchers unveil whiskered robot rat 7/2/2009

Can a new implant coating technique create a new six million dollar man? 7/1/2009

News on The First International Reconfigurable Robot Conference 7/1/2009

Reading the brain without poking it 6/30/2009

'Neurologger' reads bird brains in flight 6/26/2009

New therapy found to prevent heart failure 6/24/2009

Autonomous robot detects shrapnel 6/19/2009

International Conference on Reconfigurable Mechanisms and Robots 6/18/2009

New research program BioInterfaces launched 6/12/2009

Brain-computer interface begins new clinical trial for paralysis 6/11/2009

First heart patients implanted with next-generation mechanical heart pump 6/5/2009

Hybrid remotely operated vehicle 'Nereus' reaches deepest part of the ocean 6/4/2009

Artificial liver may extend lives 6/3/2009

Air Force funds new generation of energy efficient UAVs 5/29/2009

Robotic therapy holds promise for cerebral palsy 5/22/2009

Engineers work toward cell-sized batteries (8/22/2008)

Tags:
electronic implants, electronics, batteries

Tweezers hold the device used to test MIT's new components for microbatteries (batteries themselves are invisible in this image). - Credit: Belcher Laboratory, MIT
Tweezers hold the device used to test MIT's new components for microbatteries (batteries themselves are invisible in this image). - Credit: Belcher Laboratory, MIT
Microbatteries could power tomorrow's miniature devices

Forget 9-volts, AAs, AAAs or D batteries: The energy for tomorrow's miniature electronic devices could come from tiny microbatteries about half the size of a human cell and built with viruses.

MIT engineers have developed a way to at once create and install such microbatteries -- which could one day power a range of miniature devices, from labs-on-a-chip to implantable medical sensors -- by stamping them onto a variety of surfaces.

In the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) the week of Aug. 18, the team describes assembling and successfully testing two of the three key components of a battery. A complete battery is on its way.

"To our knowledge, this is the first instance in which microcontact printing has been used to fabricate and position microbattery electrodes and the first use of virus-based assembly in such a process," wrote MIT professors Paula T. Hammond, Angela M. Belcher, Yet-Ming Chiang and colleagues.

Further, the technique itself "does not involve any expensive equipment, and is done at room temperature," said Belcher, the Germeshausen Professor of Materials Science and Engineering and Biological Engineering.

Hammond is the Bayer Professor of Chemical Engineering and associate head of the Department of Chemical Engineering. Chiang is a professor of ceramics in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. Belcher, Chiang and Hammond are also affiliated with the MIT Energy Initiative, which aims to help transform the global energy system to meet the needs of the future. Belcher and Hammond are also faculty members in the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT.

An array of microbattery electrodes, each only about four micrometers, or millionths of a meter, in diameter. - Image courtesy: Belcher Laboratory, MIT
An array of microbattery electrodes, each only about four micrometers, or millionths of a meter, in diameter. - Image courtesy: Belcher Laboratory, MIT
Batteries consist of two opposite electrodes -- an anode and cathode -- separated by an electrolyte. In the current work, the MIT team created both the anode and the electrolyte.

First, on a clear, rubbery material the team used a common technique called soft lithography to create a pattern of tiny posts either four or eight millionths of a meter in diameter. On top of these posts, they then deposited several layers of two polymers that together act as the solid electrolyte and battery separator.

Next came viruses that preferentially self-assemble atop the polymer layers on the posts, ultimately forming the anode. In 2006, Hammond, Belcher, Chiang and colleagues reported in Science how to do this. Specifically, they altered the virus's genes so it makes protein coats that collect molecules of cobalt oxide to form ultrathin wires -- together, the anode.

The final result: a stamp of tiny posts, each covered with layers of electrolyte and the cobalt oxide anode. "Then we turn the stamp over and transfer the electrolyte and anode to a platinum structure" that, together with lithium foil, is used for testing, Hammond said.

The team concludes in their PNAS paper: "the resulting electrode arrays exhibit full electrochemical functionality."

What's next? In addition to developing the third part of a full battery -- the cathode -- via the viral assembly technique, the team is also exploring a stamp for use on curved surfaces, Belcher said. "We're also interested in integrating [the batteries] with biological organisms."

Additional coauthors of the PNAS paper are first author Ki Tae Nam, Ryan Wartena, Pil J. Yoo (now at Sungkyunkwan University, Korea), Forrest W. Liau, and Yun Jung Lee.

This work was funded by the Army Research Office Institute of Collaborative Biotechnologies, the Army Research Office Institute of Soldier Nanotechnologies, and the David and Lucille Packard Foundation.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by MIT

Comments:

1. brilliant

1/14/2009 7:07:12 PM MST

Printing in layers, thankyou guys! The virus thing is kinda creepy. People will only buy it if the programmed virus(es) cannot survive outside of their contained environment, also enzyme reactions are an obvious other choice that should be researched. Make sure that happens...

Good work, keep it up.


Leave a Reply:

Search



Archives
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007


Science Friends
Agricultural Science
Astronomy News
Biology News
Biomimicry Science
Cognitive Research
Chemistry News
Tissue Engineering
Cancer Research
Fossil News
Genetic Archaeology
Genetics News
Geology News
Nanotech News
Physics News
  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2010 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.