JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Now this could provide some truly green power. A pair of Missouri universities and electric companies announced plans Friday to use the carbon dioxide pollution from ...
That also means that the other natural places to cultivate algae are power stations. The algae can absorb as much as 75 percent of the exhaust gas, claims U.S. firm GreenFuel Technologies, using its ...
The researchers found that it actually has a dual benefit. It not only produces clean energy but also absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, making it a negative carbon emission technology. The ...
A team of researchers at the University of Cambridge successfully replaced a battery with algae to provide continuous power to a microprocessor. The tiny system is roughly the same size as an AA ...
If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement. is a senior reporter who has covered AI, robotics, and more for eight years at The Verge. Scientists ...
What’s the size of an AA battery and can run an ARM Cortex M0+ for six months? Well… probably an AA battery, but obviously, that wouldn’t be worth mentioning. But researchers at Cambridge have built a ...
Researchers at the University of Cambridge have developed a new algae-powered fuel cell that is five times more efficient than existing plant and algal models. Both cost-effective and practical to use ...
An international research team has developed an eco-friendly method using microalgae to produce highly stable and ...
23 July 2010 – Swedish utility Vattenfall has launched a pilot project using algae to absorb greenhouse gas emissions from a coal fired power plant in eastern Germany. The EUR2m ($2.6m) trial run, ...
AZoM speaks with Professor Chris Howe about his research with cyanobacteria. These algae were able to power a microprocessor for an extended period of time in an exciting new breakthrough for natural ...
Forward-looking: With energy prices soaring and the next generation of graphics cards expected to be power-guzzling monsters, what's the solution to the planet- and wallet-damaging PCs of the future?