Test
Ad 1
Ad 2
Astute Solutions
Ad 4
Ad 5
Ad 6
TECHi
Ad 8
Ad 9
Ad 10
Ad 11
Ad 12
TECHi

Artificial hearts could pump urine in order to power robots

Livescience

Two Takes Default
Two Takes Default

A team at the University of Bristol has created and EcoBot that is power by a microbial fuel cell. The fuel cell contains microorganisms that digest urine and generate electrons which are then harvested to produce an electrical current. 

There’s a new use for artificial hearts, and it involves a more taboo bodily fluid than blood. A device that mimics the squeezing action of the human heart has been used to pump urine into a microbial fuel cell, which could power robots that convert the waste into electricity.

NOTE: TECHi Two-Takes are the stories we have chosen from the web along with a little bit of our opinion in a paragraph. Please check the original story in the Source Button below.

Source