the technology and the environment

Article 1 : Bomb-Sniffing Bionic Plants Could Look for Pollution

By Edd Gent


Bionic plants that can detect explosives in real time could be the future of environmental monitoring and urban farming, researchers said in a new study.
The spinach plants have carbon-nanotube-based nanoparticles in their leaves that give off infrared light and are sensitive to the presence of nitroaromatics, key components of several explosives, the scientists said.
If these chemicals are present in groundwater, they are absorbed by the roots and transported to the leaves, where they cause the infrared emissions of the so-called "nanosensor" to decrease. 
A detector that is similar in complexity to a smartphone can then register this change in emissions, the researchers said. In tests with the nitroaromatic picric acid, this dip was detected within 10 minutes of the roots taking up the chemical, according to the study, published today (Oct. 31) in the journal Nature Materials.
The researchers said their "nanobionic" approach is much faster than previous genetic engineering methods that rely on monitoring changes like wilting or de-greening that can take hours or days and aren't easy to detect electronically. The scientists also used a wild breed of spinach rather than special lab-grown varieties. The researchers said they are confident they can replicate the method with a broad range of plant species that are well-adapted to their environments.
"Genetic engineering is very powerful, but in practice there are only a handful of plants where this can be done. We can take a plant in your backyard and easily engineer it" using nanobionics instead of genetics, said study leader Michael Strano, a professor of chemical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
Strano said plants make excellent chemical sensors due to the organisms' extensive network of roots and their ability to draw up groundwater using minimal amounts of solar energy. This is thanks to a process known as transpiration, in which moisture evaporates from the leaves, causing water to be drawn up from the roots.
Because the water evaporates, chemicals drawn up along with the fluid that don't easily vaporize get concentrated in the leaves. This means plants can detect very low concentrations of chemicals, the scientists said.
The nanosensor used in the study is sensitive to a broad range of explosives and can even detect chemicals that are produced as explosives degrade, the researchers said.
To pick up the infrared signal, the group used a small infrared camera connected to a $35 Raspberry Pi minicomputer, but Strano told Live Science that a smartphone could be easily adapted to the job if its infrared filter was removed.
Testing of the system was carried out at a distance of about 3.3 feet (1 meter), but Strano said the sensor should be capable of a much wider range, which would allow one sensor to monitor multiple plants. This is because a second fluorescent nanoparticle added along with the nanosensor is not sensitive to nitroaromatics, and so provides a constant reference infrared signal to compare against what's being picked up by the nanosensor.
"What we are interested in doing is showing we can make a really robust human-plant interface," Strano said. "The reference signal means you can intercept this IR signal from any angle, at any distance accurately and quickly."
Bogdan Dragnea, a professor of chemistry at Indiana University who specializes in nanotechnology but wasn't involved with the new study, said the work marks an exciting step toward better monitoring of soil contamination.
"A potential caveat is related to possible clearance, and/or biofouling of the transducer by the plant, and the possibility of false positives, but presumably such issues will be addressed further along the road," Dragnea told Live Science.
Strano said his group hopes to increase the number of sensors that can be applied to plants so the instruments can detect a variety of chemicals in both the air and groundwater. He said he also wants to use nanotechnology to give plants the ability to react to these signals in ways not found in nature.
"A plant can monitor its own environment for pest infestations, damage, drought," Strano said. "They're very sensitive readers of their own physiology, and we're interested in extending this approach and tapping into plants' own complex signaling pathways."
Strano and the paper's lead author, MIT graduate student Min Hao Wong, have started a company called Plantea to look into how to commercialize the technology. Strano said he thinks urban farming is a promising market because these farms need to be ultra-efficient to make the best use of expensive land. Plus, the plants would be in an enclosed space, making them easier to monitor, he added.
Raffaele Di Giacomo, a postdoctoral scholar at ETH Zurich in Switzerland, who also works on nanobionics but was not involved with this study, said the approach may encounter some difficulties with calibration and stability, but the system's simplicity and low cost should compensate for this.
"I don't doubt that in the near future we will have commercial sensing plants in our home or offices that will send us directly on our smartphone data about temperature, humidity, oxygen and pollutants," he told Live Science.

Article 2: Junkyard Metal Turned into a DIY Super Battery
By Tracy Staedter
The battery companies won't like this," Cary Pint told me. 
Pint, an assistant professor in the department of mechanical engineering at Vanderbilt University, was talking about a high-performance, grid-scale battery he and his students made from metal scrap and common household chemicals, which they documented in a published article. Not only is the battery powerful and easy-to-build, it represents a new kind of approach to innovation because it bypasses industry and manufacturing altogether and goes directly to the people. 
"We can do the hard work, we can do the development and then instead of communicating it to industry, we can communicate it to the public," Pint said.
These days, if you want to learn how to build a gizmo or repair a machine, you can search for instructions on Youtube. The proliferation of how-to videos along with the rise of the maker culture, where tinkerers and hackers merge to create new devices, has lead to innovations in just about every field. Except batteries. Pint and his students aim to change that. 
They have plans to create an online video to show do-it-yourselfers how to build the battery and then solicit feedback to make improvements. Think of it as an open source approach to energy storage.
"The average person could work with us to develop this," Pint said.
The team got their inspiration from an ancient technology called the Baghdad Battery, which dates to the first century BC. It consisted of a terracotta pot, a copper sheet and an iron rod along with some trace chemicals that could have been an electrolyte.
Components for Pint's battery sound similar. It begins with a piece of steel, a piece of brass and a jar. The team soaked the metal pieces in a jar with a solution of water and salt or a solution of water and antifreeze. Next, they applied a voltage to induce a known process called anodization, which restructures the nanoscopic composition of a metal. That exposes the metal's interior surface and makes it more receptive to storing and releasing energy.
The next step was to place a physical barrier between the two pieces of metal. Lastly, they submerged it in an electrolyte solution made from water and potassium hydroxide, a soap easily purchased online. When connected by wires to a device that generated a current, such as a solar panel, their contraption worked just like a car battery.
For their proof-of-concept battery, which is no bigger than a pill bottle, the team found that it could withstand the equivalent of 13 years of daily charging and discharging while retaining 90 percent of its capacity.
After they make the video and solicit feedback, they have plans to refine the design, scale it up and then share it with a wider audience. Anyone could use the DIY battery to store energy from their solar panels and truly disconnect from the power grid, said Pint.
"I have this vision of building an open-source tiny house with a solar panel on top of the roof and a little scrap metal battery out back, and plugging that down somewhere in the mountains," Pint said. "That would be a perfect life."

Commentary : 
These 2 articles show that the pollution and the environment can be intelligently used. Actually with the technological progress it is possible to decrease the pollution or to control it. In one hand, we have the possibility from garbage, to build baterries and in over hand from our smartphone detect germs which may be harmful to our ecosystem.

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