Skip to content

March 17, 2014

MIT’s bionic plants could be used as energy factories and sensors

by John_A

MIT's nanotube-infused plants

In many ways, plants are ideal technology hosts — they’re outdoor-friendly, self-healing and pollution-free. It only makes sense, then, that MIT scientists want to harness that potential by augmenting our leafy friends with nanotechnology. The researchers have found that injecting nanoparticles and carbon nanotubes into a plant can extend its natural abilities, or add functions that would be tricky to replicate with purely synthetic devices. One lab test supercharged photosynthesis, extracting much more energy than normal; another introduced gas sensors that could detect the nitric oxide from a car’s exhaust. There’s a lot of necessary refinement before bionic plants are practical, but we won’t be surprised if our gardens eventually double as energy sources and air quality monitors.

Filed under:

Comments

Via: Wired

Source: MIT

Read more from News

Leave a comment

Note: HTML is allowed. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to comments