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Enhancing power density of biophotovoltaics by decoupling storage and power delivery

Nature Energy, ISSN: 2058-7546, Vol: 3, Issue: 1, Page: 75-81
2018
  • 119
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 189
    Captures
  • 12
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    119
    • Citation Indexes
      119
  • Captures
    189
  • Mentions
    12
    • News Mentions
      11
      • News
        11
    • Blog Mentions
      1
      • Blog
        1

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Article Description

Biophotovoltaic devices (BPVs), which use photosynthetic organisms as active materials to harvest light, have a range of attractive features relative to synthetic and non-biological photovoltaics, including their environmentally friendly nature and ability to self-repair. However, efficiencies of BPVs are currently lower than those of synthetic analogues. Here, we demonstrate BPVs delivering anodic power densities of over 0.5 W m, a value five times that for previously described BPVs. We achieved this through the use of cyanobacterial mutants with increased electron export characteristics together with a microscale flow-based design that allowed independent optimization of the charging and power delivery processes, as well as membrane-free operation by exploiting laminar flow to separate the catholyte and anolyte streams. These results suggest that miniaturization of active elements and flow control for decoupled operation and independent optimization of the core processes involved in BPV design are effective strategies for enhancing power output and thus the potential of BPVs as viable systems for sustainable energy generation.

Bibliographic Details

Saar, Kadi L.; Bombelli, Paolo; Lea-Smith, David J.; Call, Toby; Aro, Eva-Mari; Müller, Thomas; Howe, Christopher J.; Knowles, Tuomas P. J.

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Materials Science; Energy

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