Silicon chip with 30 individual glucose micro fuel cells, seen as small silver squares inside each gray rectangle.
By Gwen Egan
The glucose fuel cell is 1/100 the diameter of a single human hair and could power miniature implants inside the human body.
What if there was a piece of ultrathin technology that was powered by sugar from the human body?
Researchers at MIT and the Technical University of Munich are answering that question with a new piece of mini tech — a tiny, yet powerful, fuel cell.
This new and improved glucose fuel cell takes glucose absorbed from food in the human body and turns it into electricity, according to MIT News. That electricity could power small implants while also being able to withstand up to 600 degrees Celsius — or 1112 degrees Fahrenheit — and measuring just 400 nanometers thick.
400 nanometers is around 1/100 of the diameter of a single human hair.
Continue reading… “This new piece of MIT technology uses sugar from the human body to create power”
