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Medical devices may benefit from Brown fuel cell technology
The new cells exploit the fact that fluids do not mix under
certain conditions.
by Scott J. Turner
Two new tiny fuel cells
developed at Brown may make long-running medical implants more of a reality.
The new fuel
cells offer features sought by manufacturers hoping to provide long-term power
for medical devices such as implants that monitor glucose levels in diabetics.
“They present a new
paradigm toward the development and manufacture of small fuel cells for medical
implants,” said lead scientist Tayhas Palmore, associate professor of
engineering, biology and medicine.
“There is a lot of
basic science yet to be worked out,” she said. “But if successful,
this design could help rid a diabetic of the need to monitor blood glucose
after each meal, and that would make for a significant advance in the treatment
of diabetes.”
 Two devices used in this study were comprised of (a) a linear channel enclosing 12 electrodes or (b) a branched channel enclosing six electrodes. Electrical leads are external to the channels. (Graphic courtesy of Tayhas Palmore)
Fuel cells are a hot topic
because they are more efficient at converting chemical energy into work than a
heat engine, are simple in design, and don't pollute. For those reasons, fuel
cells are seen as promising alternatives to the combustion engine in
automobiles, and batteries in portable electronics and medical implants.
A fuel cell consists of two
electrodes immersed in fuel-containing fluids separated by an ion-conducting
membrane. Power is produced by the fuel cell when electrons are removed from
the fuel, transported via an external circuit, and combined with positive ions
crossing the ion-conducting membrane and oxygen.
Conventional fuel cells run
on either hydrogen gas or liquid methanol but more recently, prototype fuel
cells have been shown to run on more exotic fuels such as glucose or formate.
In theory, fuels cell are amenable to a range of fuels.
The Brown fuel cells
require no ion-conducting membrane or selective catalysts at the electrodes to
separate the fuel-containing fluids, two thorny technological traits of fuel
cell design that must be considered in the development of miniature fuel cells.
Instead, the new fuel cells exploit the fact that fluids do not mix under
certain conditions.
“We take advantage of how fuels flow in small
channels,” said Palmore, “in that they don't mix, which means we
can keep fuels separated without a membrane.”
The Brown-developed fuel
cells work in tandem to provide power under the pulsating conditions that mimic
the flow of blood in the body. Before now, fuel cell makers were stymied in
their efforts to produce a membrane-less device that did not short-circuit
under pulsed flow.
One of the fuel cells
fabricated at Brown features a novel branched-channel, which encloses six
electrodes.
This fuel cell is
“most suitable for generating electrical power under conditions of
pulsed-flow,” said Palmore. “The design of the device makes
possible the delivery of power to a chip as a result of changes in the
concentration of a fuel, such as glucose,” she said. “This power
feedback is a necessary component in an imbedded sensor for diabetes.”
Palmore discussed the new
fuel cells March 27 at the 225th national meeting of the American Chemical
Society (ACS) in New Orleans.
Coauthors of the work are
graduate students Mark Luo, Jiangfeng Fei and Keng Lim. Brown, the National
Science Foundation and the Office of Naval Research funded the research.
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