Published: Feb. 5, 2021 By

Student working in the labME student Jared Beshai conducts manual readings of voltage and current while the fuel cell is operating with a glucose solution and oxygen feed.

精品SM在线影片 and CU Anschutz researchers are developing a new technique to harvest electricity from blood sugar to power medical devices as part of a project with Department of Veterans Affairs.

The proposed device would use a flexible, cloth-like membrane electrode that can generate electricity听as blood flows over it. The technology would be the first of its kind and could provide a new avenue for a reliable and compact power source for use in prostheses and implantable medical devices such as pacemakers.

While the concept is intriguing, CU Anschutz Bioengineering said there is still a lot of work to be done to make it a reality.

鈥淩esearchers have been trying to do this for years because of the benefits to patients, but we think using the new membrane constructs will enable us to succeed and make this leap,鈥 said Weir, an expert in artificial limb design. 鈥淔or now there is a lot of work to be done making a prototype and getting to our ultimate goal of a fully implanted system in the body.鈥

Weir is joined on the project by 精品SM在线影片听Research Professor John Pellegrino 鈥 an expert in membrane sciences 鈥 and Engineering Plus Instructor Jacob Segil.听All three are part of the Multi-functional Materials Interdisciplinary Research Theme within the College of Engineering and Applied Science at 精品SM在线影片.

The VA is funding the research with a Small Projects in Rehabilitation Research grant through the Rocky Mountain Regional VA Medical Center.

The team鈥檚 device operates on commonly understood chemical reactions and principles to create the necessary electricity.听Human blood is full of glucose, a naturally occurring sugar that fuels the body. The anion exchange membrane and catalysts the team are using react with those sugars, creating electricity as a byproduct. That reaction can be fine-tuned by modifying the membrane, using novel materials science techniques and new fabrication approaches to maximize the amount of electricity produced. Pellegrino said it was a promising application.

"Our multidisciplinary team was prompted by the realization that prosthetic devices are meant to do the same workloads as a normally functioning body part that is already powered by the sugar in our blood supply,鈥 Pellegrino said. 鈥淪o why not re-create that direct connection with advanced materials and engineering design?"听

The membrane

Membrane electrode听assembly

The team is quick to note they are still a year away from actually testing the system with blood and are only focusing on uses for prosthetic hands for now. They will also eventually have to consider related issues such as how a user鈥檚 water or food intake may affect the amount of electricity produced or how this system would interact with other health issues related to blood sugar like diabetes.听

However, the proposed technology could eventually replace the heavy rechargeable batteries in current prosthetics with a handkerchief-sized piece of the fabric-like material. Doing so would improve the quality of life for patients by increasing their mobility, removing the need for constant charging and further integrating the systems into the body. That last aspect is particularly important for their mental health and well-being.

The system could also enable new forms of treatment and monitoring through miniaturized devices that would be free of large battery requirements.

Segil has many ongoing projects with the VA on prosthetics and said this is a natural extension of that work, which aims to help and heal patients in everyday life.

鈥淓very step we take towards using the existing physiological methods in our artificial devices improves the outcomes for people with amputation,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e hope that one day people with amputation can power their physiological and artificial limbs from the same source: food!鈥