| PALO ALTO,
Calif.--A research project at Stanford University is trying to determine
whether survival of the fittest can help humanity build better cars.
Researchers at the university, led
by chemical engineering professor James Swartz, have discovered a soil
microorganism that absorbs photons and subsequently metabolizes the energy
to split water, a chemical reaction that produces hydrogen, Jim Plummer,
Stanford's dean of engineering, said during a presentation at the AlwaysOn
conference taking place at the university this week.
"Instead of using it (the energy
from sunlight) to grow, it uses it to split water molecules," Plummer said.
Unfortunately, the microorganism
in its natural state is anaerobic, which means it dies when exposed to
large concentrations of oxygen.
To get around this problem, the researchers
produce millions of the bugs and expose them to a low concentration of
oxygen. They then take the ones that survive and use them to parent a new
generation of bugs.
The idea is to, over time, create
a new race of bugs that can survive in a relatively normal environment.
Entire generations of bugs can be produced fairly rapidly, but wholesale
changes in the genetic code do take time.
Although it's the most abundant element
in the universe, hydrogen isn't easy to harvest here on Earth. It can be
extracted from coal, but the reaction leaves carbon dioxide, a greenhouse
gas. Water molecules can also be split through electrolysis, but that requires
energy. Signa Chemistry in New York recently revealed a way to produce
hydrogen by better controlling the normally explosive reaction of sodium
and water.
Hydrogen is seen as a potential fuel
source for cars, among other applications.
The Stanford project began three
years ago with $50,000 from the university but has since attracted major
corporate funding, Plummer said. He also acknowledged that there are ethical
questions, along with the potential for unintended consequences, with this
sort of research.
Plummer--along with Alice Gast, vice
president of research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology--spoke
during a roundtable Thursday that focused in part on alternative energy.
"Despite the current price of oil,
it is a long-term problem," Gast said.
Plummer, who has been one of the
more vocal proponents in academia about alternative energy, asserted that
the government also needs to do more to set energy policy and fund research.
If the project with the microorganisms
works out, it could solve one of the vexing problems facing the so-called
hydrogen economy.
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Gast and Plummer also shed light
on other projects going on at their universities.
A number of researchers at MIT are
delving into the problem of quantum computing, which essentially involves
generating 0s and 1s by changing (and tracking) the energy state of electrons.
At Stanford, some researchers are
working on a GPS-like device with an atomic clock that potentially could
be accurate up to a millimeter. Now, GPS, or Global Positioning System,
technology is accurate to within a few meters.
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