Electric Eel-Based Device Could Power Future Medical Implants

A new flexible, transparent electrical device inspired by electric eels could lead to body-friendly power sources for implanted health monitors and medication dispensers, augmented-reality contact lenses, and countless other applications, researchers report.

The soft cells—made of hydrogel and salt—form the first potentially biocompatible artificial electric organ that generates more than 100 volts. It produces a steady buzz of electricity at high voltage but low current, a bit like an extremely low-volume but high-pressure jet of water. It could be enough to power a small medical device like a pacemaker.

While the technology is preliminary, Michael Mayer, a professor of biophysics at the Adolphe Merkle Institute of the University of Fribourg in Switzerland and the paper’s corresponding author, believes it may one day be useful for powering implantable or wearable devices without the toxicity, bulk, or frequent recharging that come with batteries.

Further down the road, it could even lead to bioelectric systems that could generate electricity from naturally occurring processes inside the body.

Eel power

The device still can’t hold a candle to the electric eel, which can pump out far more power in short bursts to zap prey or defend itself. But researchers say they’ve taken an important first step that advances fundamental understanding of soft power sources.

“The eel polarizes and depolarizes thousands of cells instantaneously to put out these high voltages,” says study coauthor Max Shtein, associate professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Michigan. “It’s a fascinating system to look at from an engineering perspective—its performance metrics, its fundamental building blocks, and how to use them.”

One secret to the eel’s success is a phenomenon called transmembrane transport. Specialized electrical organs contain thousands of alternating compartments, each with an excess of either potassium or sodium ions.

The compartments are separated by selective membranes that, in the eel’s resting state, keep the two ions separate. When the eel needs to create a jolt of electricity, the membranes allow the ions to flow together, creating a burst of power.

The researchers built a similar system, though instead of sodium and potassium, they used the sodium and chloride that are naturally combined in common table salt, dissolved in water-based hydrogel.

Using a specialized printer at the Adolphe Merkle Institute, they printed thousands of tiny droplets of the salty gel on a plastic sheet, alternating them with hydrogel droplets of pure water. The alternating droplets are similar to the eel’s compartments.

Next, the researchers needed to mimic the eel’s selective membrane that keeps the compartments separate. They used a second sheet of alternating droplets, this one made of charge-selective hydrogel. Each droplet allows either positively charged sodium or negatively charged chloride to pass, excluding the other.

To generate power, the two sheets are pressed together, connecting saline and freshwater droplets across the charge-selective droplets in series. As the salty and fresh solutions mix, the charge-selective droplets move the sodium and chloride ions in opposing directions, producing an electric current.

One more trick

The researchers took one final trick from the eel: its thousands of compartments can shuffle ions instantaneously, producing a coordinated jolt just when it’s needed. The researchers needed to do something similar with their thousands of alternating cells, combining them all in exactly the right order, simultaneously.

Shtein, along with graduate students Anirvan Guha of the Adolphe Merkle Institute and Thomas Schroeder and Aaron Lamoureux of the University of Michigan, solved the problem with an origami technique called a Miura fold. Invented by a Japanese astrophysicist, the Miura fold is often used to fold solar panels into satellites at launch, then unpack them into large sheets once they’re in space.

They used the idea in reverse, alternating all four droplet types in a precise pattern on a flat sheet that had been laser-scored in a Miura pattern. When researchers applied pressure, the sheet quickly folded together, stacking the cells in exactly the right positions.

“The electric organs in eels are incredibly sophisticated; they’re far better at generating power than we are,” Mayer says. “But the important thing for us was to replicate the basics of what’s happening.”

Other researchers from the University of Michigan, the Adolphe Merkle Institute at the University of Fribourg, and the University of California-San Diego are coauthors of the study, which appears in Nature.

The Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health funded the work.


This article appeared on Futurity. Read the article.

Source: University of Michigan

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