Energy

Underwater chemical garden powers a light bulb

Underwater chemical garden powers a light bulb
Researchers linked several chemical gardens together in the laboratory to power a LED light
Researchers linked several chemical gardens together in the laboratory to power a LED light
View 2 Images
Researchers linked several chemical gardens together in the laboratory to power a LED light
1/2
Researchers linked several chemical gardens together in the laboratory to power a LED light
A laboratory-created "chemical garden" made of a combination of black iron sulfide and orange iron hydroxide/oxide
2/2
A laboratory-created "chemical garden" made of a combination of black iron sulfide and orange iron hydroxide/oxide

Researchers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory have grown underwater chimney-like structures capable of generating enough electricity to power a light bulb. The team linked several of these chimneys to get the required electricity. Their findings indicate that the seafloor equivalents of these chemical gardens might just have contributed the electricity needed for the Earth's first organisms to develop.

One popular theory as to how life took root on Earth, called the alkalinevent hypothesis, supposes that life came into being underwater aided by warm,alkaline chimneys. Ranging in size from a few inches to tens of feet, these chimneys form naturally at bubbling hypothermal vents on theseafloor.

It’s possible that, when the Earth was still young, chimneys like these generatedelectrical and proton gradients across the mineral membranes that distinguish theircompartments. These gradients emulate vital life processes to generate energywhich could have been used by early organisms. The chimney’s special ability totransfer electrical currents is key to the whole process.

"These chimneys can act like electrical wires on the seafloor,"says Laurie Barge of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California,lead author of the study. "We're harnessing energy as the first life onEarth might have."

The research team's findings indicate that life on early Earth may have got anelectrical boost from structures like these.

"Life doesn't want to get electrocuted, but needs just the right amountof electricity," says Michael Russell of JPL, a co-author of the study."This new experiment confirms what that amount of electricity is – justunder a volt."

The team created the chimneys with geological materials capable ofconducting electrons, like iron sulphide and iron hydroxide. When they immersedthese structures in iron-containing fluids and connected four of them together. After months of refinement, they got enough electricity to power an LED light bulb.

Future plans include conducting experiments with materials thatmight have been present in Earth’s hydrothermal vents and early oceans, such as nickel, hydrogen, molybdenum and carbon dioxide, toassess their electrical potential.

Figuring out the right combination will enable them tocreate a chimney that might be capable of powering a light all by itself. Ultimatelythe researchers aim to help piece together the story of the origins of life on Earth. The team also suggests that testing of materials potentially involved in the development of life on other planets and moons, like Mars or Jupiter’s Moon Europa, is also possible.

A paper describing the research was published in the Journal AngewandteChemie International Edition.

Source: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory

No comments
0 comments
There are no comments. Be the first!