Synthetic “Leaf” That Produces Oxygen
Julian Melchiorri, a graduate of the Royal College of Art, claims to have developed a silk leaf that could create oxygen for space travel as well as make the air nicer here on Earth. The leaf was developed in conjunction with a silk lab from Tufts University
The leaf is created from a matrix of protein extracted from silk and chloroplasts, the organelle that allows plants and algae to perform photosynthesis. When provided with light and water, the synthetic leaf allegedly acts just like a real leaf and produces oxygen.
“It’s very light, low energy-consuming,” he explains. “It’s completely biological and my idea was to use the efficiency of nature in a man-made environment. I created some lighting out of this material, using the light to illuminate the house but at the same time to create oxygen for us.”
More: http://www.iflscience.com/technology/inventor-develops-synthetic-leaf-produces-oxygen
FiveWordsForTheFuture - Oct 1, 2014 | Biotechnologies, Energy, Green Economy, Innovation, Sciences, Sustainability, Synthetic Nature, Technologies
Tagged | artificial nature, biotechnologies, sustainability