Off-Prem

Edge + IoT

Arm CPU ran on electricity generated by algae for over six months

AA-battery-sized biological photovoltaic cell touted as ideal for IoT applications


Researchers at the University of Cambridge's Department of Biochemistry have run an Arm CPU for six months using algae as a power source.

As explained in a paper titled Powering a microprocessor by photosynthesis, the biochem boffins built an AA-battery-sized device that hosts an algae named Synechocystis that "naturally harvests energy from the sun through photosynthesis."

The boffins found a way to turn that harvested energy into current by using an aluminium anode, and fed it into a board hosting an Arm Cortex M0+ CPU.

Arm states that device is its most energy-efficient architecture, with one model sipping just 3.8 Microwatts per megahertz.

No – this one can't play Doom, or Crysis. Or any game at all, probably.

But the M0+ does do very well in small, embedded devices that need to go a long time between battery changes – a quality that makes it ideal for Internet of Things devices.

Professor Christopher Howe of Cambridge's Department of Biochemistry thinks many of those devices will do best if they can generate their own power, instead of relying on stored energy. The Prof pointed out that batteries and solar cells can do the job – but also use rare metals and some nasty chemicals, and eventually wear out.

The biological photovoltaic cell does better by producing power continuously, even in low light or at night-time – the algae it contains apparently keeps processing energy even after the sun has stopped shining.

The renewable biological photovoltaic cell
image: Paolo Bombelli under CC 3.0

The test unit covered in the paper was deployed in "semi-outdoor conditions under natural light and associated temperature fluctuations." The researchers behind the project said the gizmo also used "common, durable, inexpensive and largely recyclable materials."

Arm Research developed the test chip used in the trial, built the board, and set up the data-collection cloud interface presented in the experiments.

This one is pure research, without a hint of future productisation. But, as the research points out, humanity plans to deploy a trillion IoT devices in coming decades – ideas on how to do that sustainably are likely to be very welcome. ®

Send us news
91 Comments

As Arm rivals cook up custom silicon, Mediatek sticks to tried-and-true Cortex recipe

Exec Chris Bergey tells us what the chip designer is doing to stay competitive

Arm to Qualcomm: See you in court? Oh yes, please

Doesn't quite confirm eight-week license cancellation deadline, but does strap on the gloves

Arm reportedly warns Qualcomm it will cancel its licenses

Qualcomm brands ploy as 'unfounded' cash grab

Microsoft's Arm-based Cobalt 100 CPU now live and powering Azure VMs

For general-purpose and memory-optimized workloads

Softbank CEO says 'super AI' will arrive in 2035 and cost $9T

Oh, and it'll need the total current US power output

Datacenter developer says power issues holding up new builds

'The single biggest constraint is access,' says exec looking to invest 'hundreds of millions'

Chinese engineers wire Raspberry Pi into 600-meter railway tunnel to find any holes

The GPIO turns out to be a handy tool if you want to measure the conductivity of concrete

Smart homes may be a bright idea, just not for the dim bulbs who live in 'em

How many Reg hacks does it take to change a light fitting...?

DoE awards next-gen nuclear fuel contracts backwards

'Deconversion' can begin now, but initial enrichment, transportation and storage to processors is still TBD

Fujitsu teams up with Supermicro on Arm-based server CPU

Liquid cooling on the mind

If you're excited by that $1.5B Michigan nuke plant revival, bear in mind it's definitely a fixer-upper

Activists, ex-insider sound the alarm as operator says all is under control

Not just AI datacenters needing own power: Taiwanese server-maker Quanta has bought microgrids

California utilities couldn't deliver for hyperscalers' favorite hardware slinger