Now, charge mobiles with bacteria-eating virus | HT Tech

Now, charge mobiles with bacteria-eating virus

Fed up of the mounting electricity bills? Now, you can save electricity by charging you phone with a unique technique that harnesses electricity from a bacteria eating virus.

By:PTI
| Updated on: Aug 14 2012, 19:16 IST

Scientists claim to have developed a unique technique to harness electricity from a bacteria eating virus to power your mobile phones.

A team at the University of California, Berkeley are using the virus known as M13 bacteriophage to replace toxic elements used to charge the cell phones.

The virus possesses a property known as piezoelectricity, which means it can translate mechanical energy into electrical energy, the 'Daily Mail' reported.

Researchers believe the discovery could pave way for mobile phones that can be charged while you walk and replace the toxic piezoelectric elements already used in mobile phones.

Most mobile phone microphones are piezoelectric because they need to convert energy from sound waves into electrical output that can be transmitted and then translated back into sound waves at the other end of the line.

These piezoelectric components are made out of heavy, toxic metals such as lead and cadmium, according to bioengineer Seung-Wuk Lee.

M13 bacteriophage has the ability to generate electricity when compressed without the involvement of any toxic chemicals.

Lee and his colleagues found that the pencil-shaped M13 virus is potentially a perfect energy source because the virus is not harmful to humans.

It is also cheap and easy to make to the extent that scientists can get trillions of viruses from a single flask of infected bacteria.

To improve the electricity generating power of M13, Lee's team tweaked the amino acid content of the virus's outer protein coat by adding four negatively charged glutamate molecules.

'This will bring a lot of excitement to the field,' said Zhong Lin Wang, an engineer at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

'By utilising the properties of these biomaterials, we can find unique applications in the future,' Wang said.

Catch all the Latest Tech News, Mobile News, Laptop News, Gaming news, Wearables News , How To News, also keep up with us on Whatsapp channel,Twitter, Facebook, Google News, and Instagram. For our latest videos, subscribe to our YouTube channel.

First Published Date: 14 Aug, 15:12 IST
NEXT ARTICLE BEGINS