Bacteria Can Be Used to Power Micro-Machines, Including Smartphone Components: Study

Advertisement
By Indo-Asian News Service | Updated: 11 July 2016 18:00 IST
A team of scientists has demonstrated how the natural movement of bacteria could be harnessed to assemble and power microscopic 'windfarms' - or other man-made micro-machines such as smartphone components.

Using computer simulations, the scientists from Oxford University demonstrated that the chaotic swarming effect of dense active matter such as bacteria can be organised to turn cylindrical rotors and provide a steady power source.

"Many of society's energy challenges are on the gigawatt scale, but some are downright microscopic. One potential way to generate tiny amounts of power for micromachines might be to harvest it directly from biological systems such as bacteria suspensions," said study co-author Tyler Shendruk.

Advertisement

The study results were published recently in the journal 'Science Advances'.

Swimming bacteria are normally too disordered to extract any useful power from. But when the team immersed a lattice of 64 symmetric microrotors into a dense bacterial suspension, the bacteria spontaneously organised itself in such a way that neighbouring rotors began to spin in opposite directions - a simple structural organisation reminiscent of a windfarm.

Advertisement

"The amazing thing is that we didn't have to pre-design microscopic gear-shaped turbines. The rotors just self-assembled into a sort of bacterial windfarm," Shendruk said.

"When we did the simulation with a single rotor in the bacterial turbulence, it just got kicked around randomly. But when we put an array of rotors in the living fluid, they suddenly formed a regular pattern, with neighbouring rotors spinning in opposite directions," he added.

Advertisement

At micro scales, the simulations show that the flow generated by biological assemblies is capable of reorganising itself in such a way as to generate a persistent mechanical power for rotating an array of microrotors, which could be harnessed to power micro-machines.

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Flipkart SASA LELE Sale 2026: Top Realme Smartphones to Buy During the Upcoming Sale
  2. Motorola Razr Fold First Impressions
  3. Google Launches Fitbit Air as a Competitor to Whoop
  4. Anthropic Releases Claude Add-Ins for Microsoft Excel, PowerPoint and Word
  5. Itel Zeno 200 With 5,000mAh Battery Arrives in India at This Price
  6. iPhone 17 and These Devices to Get Price Cuts During Flipkart's Sale
  1. NoiseFit Halo 3 With 1.43-Inch AMOLED Screen, Up to 7 Days of Battery Launched in India: Price, Features
  2. Vivo X500 Series Could Comprise at Least Three Models Recently Listed on IMEI Database
  3. Resident Evil Requiem's Free Minigame Mode, Leon Must Die Forever, Is Now Available
  4. Apple's AirPods With Built-In Cameras Said to Enter Advanced Testing Phase, Could Launch Soon
  5. Bumble to Kill Swipe, Replace It With Something ‘Revolutionary’: Report
  6. Sony Xperia 1 VIII Launch Date Seemingly Confirmed as Sony Teases Launch of New Xperia 1 Series Phone
  7. CMF Watch 3 Pro With Dual-Band GPS, Up to 13 Days Battery Life Goes on Sale in India: Price, Specifications
  8. Samsung Refreshes Mini LED TV Lineup in India With NQ4 AI Gen2 Processor, 144Hz Screens: Price, Features
  9. Netflix Is Reportedly Testing an AI-Powered Voice Search Feature
  10. Itel Zeno 200 Launched in India With 5,000mAh Battery, 13-Megapixel Rear Camera: Price, Specifications
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.