bioenergy tagged posts

Tiny ‘Skyscrapers’ help Bacteria Convert Sunlight into Electricity

Researchers have made tiny ‘skyscrapers’ for communities of bacteria, helping them to generate electricity from just sunlight and water.

The researchers, from the University of Cambridge, used 3D printing to create grids of high-rise ‘nano-housing’ where sun-loving bacteria can grow quickly. The researchers were then able to extract the bacteria’s waste electrons, left over from photosynthesis, which could be used to power small electronics.

Other research teams have extracted energy from photosynthetic bacteria, but the Cambridge researchers have found that providing them with the right kind of home increases the amount of energy they can extract by over an order of magnitude...

Read More

Potential of Disk-Shaped Small Structures, Coccoliths, to Promote Efficient Bioenergy Production

Coccolithophore phytoplankton Emiliania huxleyi and cells covering crystals of calcium carbonate—coccoliths. Credit: Hiroshima University

Coccolithophore phytoplankton Emiliania huxleyi and cells covering crystals of calcium carbonate—coccoliths. Credit: Hiroshima University

Coccolith disks made of calcium carbonate, formed by coccolithophores, which are single-celled algae such as E. huxleyi, one of the promising biomass resources reduces/ enhances light entering cells by light scattering. Elucidation of the physiological significance of coccolith formation can help promote efficient bioenergy production using microalgae.

The most important question concerning coccolith function is with regard to how they modulate solar light in the ocean, where huge blooms of E. huxleyi have frequently been observed as satellite images by SeaWiFS Color Senor from space...

Read More