Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1267857 Bioelectrochemistry 2015 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Biofuel cell implanted in an orange and operated in vivo•The biofuel cell operated ex situ and in situ; in laboratory and on a tree•The produced voltage was amplified using a DC‐converter (a charge pump)•The produced power was used to activate a wireless transmitting device

A biofuel cell composed of catalytic electrodes made of “buckypaper” modified with PQQ-dependent glucose dehydrogenase and FAD-dependent fructose dehydrogenase on the anode and with laccase on the cathode was used to activate a wireless information transmission system. The cathode/anode pair was implanted in orange pulp extracting power from its content (glucose and fructose in the juice). The open circuit voltage, Voc, short circuit current density, jsc, and maximum power produced by the biofuel cell, Pmax, were found as ca. 0.6 V, ca. 0.33 mA·cm− 2 and 670 μW, respectively. The voltage produced by the biofuel cell was amplified with an energy harvesting circuit and applied to a wireless transmitter. The present study continues the research line where different implantable biofuel cells are used for the activation of electronic devices. The study emphasizes the biosensor and environmental monitoring applications of implantable biofuel cells harvesting power from natural sources, rather than their biomedical use.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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