Publication | Closed Access
From Chemical Gardens to Fuel Cells: Generation of Electrical Potential and Current Across Self‐Assembling Iron Mineral Membranes
22
Citations
18
References
2015
Year
Chemical EngineeringElectrical PotentialChemical Garden MembranesBattery Electrode MaterialsEngineeringProton-exchange MembraneEnergy StorageHydrothermal Redox ChemistryFuel CellsRedox ChemistryChemistryElectrochemical ProcessElectrochemical CellBiofuel CellFunctional MaterialsElectrochemistryElectrochemical GradientsChemical Gardens
Abstract We examine the electrochemical gradients that form across chemical garden membranes and investigate how self‐assembling, out‐of‐equilibrium inorganic precipitates—mimicking in some ways those generated in far‐from‐equilibrium natural systems—can generate electrochemical energy. Measurements of electrical potential and current were made across membranes precipitated both by injection and solution interface methods in iron‐sulfide and iron‐hydroxide reaction systems. The battery‐like nature of chemical gardens was demonstrated by linking multiple experiments in series which produced sufficient electrical energy to light an external light‐emitting diode (LED). This work paves the way for determining relevant properties of geological precipitates that may have played a role in hydrothermal redox chemistry at the origin of life, and materials applications that utilize the electrochemical properties of self‐organizing chemical systems.
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