Engineered Tobacco Plants Grow Synthetic Solar Cells

Monday, January 25, 2010 - 17:35 in Physics & Chemistry

Where there's smoke, there's power When it comes to energy efficiency, there's still no substitute for millions upon millions of years of evolution. Scientists at UC Berkeley have found a way to hack common tobacco plants to grow synthetic photovoltaic and photochemical cells that can be extracted, dissolved in solution and sprayed onto a glass or plastic substrate to create solar panels. That's the idea, anyhow. Eons of living on earth have made plants very efficient gatherers of sunlight, so the researchers genetically programmed a virus that can infect a tobacco crop. But rather than replicating genetic copies of itself like a normal virus, this one causes the plant to manufacture artificial chromosphores, tiny structures that turn sunlight into high-powered electrons. Related ArticlesGreen Dream: A Solar Power Plant in Your BackyardSunny News for Solar PowerSolar PowerTagsScience, Clay Dillow, agriculture, energy, genetics, photovoltaics, solar cells, solar power, the environment, tobaccoThe chromosphores grow one...

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