UGA researchers achieve breakthrough in effort to develop tiny biological fuel cells

Friday, June 19, 2009 - 16:42 in Physics & Chemistry

University of Georgia researchers have developed a successful way to grow molecular wire brushes that conduct electrical charges, a first step in developing biological fuel cells that could power pacemakers, cochlear implants and prosthetic limbs. The journal Chemical Science calls the technique "a significant breakthrough for nanotechnology."

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