Mobile phones charging and other devices using urine

The drive to develop renewable energy solutions has seen a rise in the adoption of solar-powered homes, battery-powered cars, and more. We may soon be seeing a new form of energy generation from waste as scientists in the United Kingdom have unveiled a new clean energy fuel cell that is capable of converting human waste into electricity.

The new solution is developed by a team of researchers at Bristol BioEnergy Centre. The project is known as “pee power” and was first demonstrated by the firm at the Glastonbury festival about two years back. The firm is hoping to make advancements on the project that will make it possible for a deployment to power entire households someday.

At the Glastonbury festival in 2024, the scientists were able to prove that urine can produce a steady supply of electricity of low wattage. The energy produced can then be used to power lightbulbs, mobile phones, and robots. Bristol BioEnergy Centre’s director Dr Ioannis Ieropoulos explained that the solution was able to generate 300 watt-hours of electricity during the five-day festival which would have been able to power a single one-watt lightbulb for 300 hours, or 10 lightbulbs for 30 hours.

The new power generation solution deplys what the company calls microbial fuel cells. this includes several blocks that look like batteries but are filled with a colony of microbes. The microbes feed on organic matter which are then broken down into chemical energy and in turn generate electricity and clean wastewater.

One challenge the team faces presently is how to reduce the size of the fuel cells such that they can be put inside bricks and integrated with the walls of homes. We’ll definitely be hearing more about this simple but innovative technology going forward.

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