Using nature to grow batteries Angela Belcher

I thought I would talk a little bit

about how nature makes materials I

brought along with me an abalone shell

this abalone shell is a bio composite

material that’s ninety eight percent by

mass calcium carbonate and two percent

by mass protein yet it’s three thousand

times tougher than its geological

counterpart and a lot of people might

use structures like abalone shells like

chalk I’ve been fascinated by how nature

makes materials and there’s a lot of

secrets to how they do such an exquisite

job part of it is that these materials

are or macroscopic and structure but

they’re formed at the nano scale the

formed at the nanoscale and they use

proteins that are coded by the genetic

level that allow them to build these

really exquisite structures so something

I think is very fascinating is what if

you could give life to non living

structures like batteries and like solar

cells what if they had some of the same

capabilities that an abalone shell did

in terms of being able to build really

exquisite structures at room temperature

and room pressure using non toxic

chemicals and adding no toxic materials

back into the environment so that’s kind

of the vision that that that I’ve been

thinking about and so what if you could

grow a battery in a petri dish or what

if you could give genetic information to

a battery so that it could actually

become better as a function of time and

do so in environmentally friendly way

and so going back to this abalone shell

one thing besides being nanostructured

one thing that’s fascinating is when a

male and female abalone get together

they pass on the genetic information

that says this is how to build an

exquisite material here’s how to do it

at room temperature and pressure using

non-toxic materials same with diatoms

which is shown right here which are

glassy asst structures every time the

diatoms replicate they give the genetic

information that says here’s how to

build glass in the ocean that’s

perfectly nanostructured and you can do

it the same over and over again so what

if you could do the same thing with a

solar cell or a battery I like to say my

favorite biomaterials my four-year-old

ma’am but anyone who’s ever had or no

small children other incredibly complex

organisms and so if you wanted to

convince them to do something that they

don’t want to do it’s very difficult and

so when we think of

future technologies we actually think of

using bacteria and virus simple

organisms can you convince them to work

with a new tool box so that they can

build a structure that would be

important to me also we think about

future technologies we start with the

beginning of earth basically took a

billion years to have have life on earth

and very rapidly they became

multicellular they could replicate they

could use photosynthesis as a way of

getting their energy source but it was

until about 500 million years ago during

the Cambrian geologic time period that

organisms in the ocean started making

hard materials before that they’re all

soft fluffy structures and it was during

this time that there was increased

calcium and iron and silicon in the

environment and organisms learned how to

make hard materials and so that’s what I

would like to be able to do convince

biology to work with the rest of the

periodic table now if you look at at

biology there’s many structures like DNA

and antibodies and proteins and

ribosomes that you’ve heard about that

are already nano structured so nature

already gives us really exquisite

structures on the nanoscale what if we

could harness them and convince them to

not not you know be an antibody that

that does something like HIV but what if

we could convince them to build a solar

cell for us and so here’s some examples

of some natural shells those natural

biological materials the abalone shell

here and if you fracture you can look at

the fact that it’s nanostructured

there’s diatoms made out of sio2 and

they’re magnetotactic bacteria that

makes small single domain magnets used

for navigation what all these have in

common is these materials are structured

at the nanoscale and they have a DNA

sequence that codes for a protein

sequence that gives them the blueprint

to be able to build these really

wonderful structures now going back to

the abalone shell the abilene makes the

shell by having these proteins these

proteins are very negatively charged and

you can pull calcium out of the

environment put down a layer of calcium

and then carbonate calcium and carbonate

it has the chemical sequences of amino

acids which says this is how to build

the structure here’s the DNA sequence

here’s the protein sequence in order to

do it and so an interesting idea is what

if you could take any material that you

wanted or any element on the periodic

table and find its corresponding DNA

sequence the coded for a corresponding

protein

sequence to build a structure but not

build an abalone shell build something

that through nature’s had never had the

opportunity to work with yet and so

here’s the periodic table and I

absolutely love the periodic table every

year for the incoming freshman class at

MIT I have a periodic table may that

says welcome to MIT now you’re in your

element and you flip it over and it’s

the amino acids with with the pH at

which they have different charges and so

do i give us out to thousands of people

and i know it says MIT this is cal tech

but i have a couple extra if people want

it and I was really fortunate to have

president obama visit my lab this year

and his visit to MIT and i really wanted

to give him a periodic table so i stayed

up at night and i talked to my husband

how do i you know give President Obama

periodic table what if he says I already

have one I’ve already memorized it and

so he came to visit lab and then looked

around it was a great visit and then

afterwards I said sir I want to give you

the periodic table in case you’re ever

in a bind and need to calculate

molecular weight and I thought molecular

weight sounded much less nerdy than

molar mass and and so he looked at it

and he said thank you i’ll look at it

periodically and

later in a lecture that he gave on clean

energy p pulled it out and said look at

people at MIT they give out periodic

tables so so basically one what I didn’t

tell you is that it’s about 500 million

years ago that organism started making

materials but it took him about 50

million years to get good at it took

about 50 million years to learn how to

perfect how to make that abalone shell

that’s that’s a hard sell to a graduate

student I had this great project 50

million years and so we had to develop a

way of trying to do this more rapidly

and we use a virus that’s a non-toxic

virus called m13 bacteriophage this job

is to infect bacteria what has a simple

DNA structure we can go in and cut and

paste additional DNA sequences into it

and by doing that it allows the virus to

express random protein sequences and

this is pretty easy biotechnology and

you can basically do this a billion

times and so you can go in and have a

billion different viruses are all

genetically identical but they differ

from each other based on their their

tips on one sequence that codes for one

protein now if you take all billion

viruses and you can put them in one drop

of liquid you can force them to interact

with anything you want on the periodic

table and through a process of selection

evolution you can pull one out of a

billion that does something that you’d

like you to do like grow a battery or

grow a solar cell and so basically

viruses can’t replicate themselves they

need a host once you find that one out

of a billion you infect into a bacteria

and you make millions and billions of

copies of that particular sequence and

so the other thing that’s beautiful

about biology is that biology gives you

really exquisite structures nice link

scales and these viruses are long and

skinny and we can get them to express

the ability to grow something like

semiconductors or materials for

batteries now this is a high powered

battery that we grew in my lab we

engineered viruses to pick up carbon

nanotubes so one part of the virus grabs

a carbon nanotube the other part of

virus has a sequence that can grow an

electrode material for a battery and

then it wires itself to the current

collector and so through a process of

selection evolution we went from being

able to have a virus who made kind of a

crummy battery to a virus it made a good

battery to a virus that made a

record-breaking high powered battery

that’s all made at room temperature

basically at the bench top and that

battery went to the White House for a

press conference and I brought it here

you can see it in this case

that’s lighting this LED now if we could

scale this you could you actually use it

to to drive your run your Prius which is

kind of my dream to be able to drive a

virus powered car but it’s basically

where you would basically even you can

pull one out of a billion you can make

lots of amplifications to it basically

you make an amplification in the lab and

then you get it to self-assemble into a

structure like a battery we’re able to

do this also with catalysis this is the

example of photocatalytic splitting of

water and what we’ve been able to do is

engineer a virus to basically take die

absorbing molecules and line them up on

the surface of the virus acts as an

antenna and you get a energy transfer

across the virus and then we give it a

second gene to grow an inorganic

material that can be used to split water

into oxygen and hydrogen that could be

used for for clean fuels and I brought

an example with me that today my

students promised me it would work these

are virus assembled nanowires when you

shine light on them you can start seeing

them bubbling in this case you’re seeing

oxygen bubbles come out and basically by

controlling the jeans you can control

multiple materials to improve your

device performance the last example our

solar cells you can also do this with

solar cells we’ve been able to engineer

viruses to pick up carbon nanotubes and

then grow titanium dioxide around them

basically and use as a way of getting

electrons through the device and what we

found is through genetic engineering we

can actually increase the efficiencies

of these solar cells to to record

numbers for these types of

dye-sensitized systems and I brought one

of those as well that that you can play

around with outside afterwards so this

is a virus based solar cell through

evolution and selection we took it from

basically an eight percent efficiency

solar cell to eleven percent efficiency

solar cell so I hope that I’ve convinced

you that that there’s a lot of great

interesting things to be learned about

how nature makes materials and taking it

the next step to see if you can you can

force or whether you can take advantage

of how nature makes materials to make

things that that nature hasn’t yet

dreamed of making thank you

you

我想我会

谈谈大自然是如何制造

我随身携带的材料的鲍鱼壳

这种鲍鱼壳是一种生物复合

材料,其中含有 98%

质量的碳酸钙和 2

% 质量的蛋白质,但它

比 它的地质

对应物,很多人可能会

使用像鲍鱼壳这样的结构,比如

粉笔 和结构,但

它们是在纳米尺度上形成的,在纳米尺度上

形成的,它们使用

由基因水平编码的蛋白质

,使它们能够构建这些

非常精致的结构,所以

我认为非常有趣的是,如果

你能给生命带来什么 对于

像电池和太阳能电池这样的非生物结构

,如果它们具有与

鲍鱼壳相同的能力,会怎样?

能够

在室温

和室温下使用无毒

化学物质建造非常精美的结构,并且不会将有毒材料添加

回环境中

,这就是我一直在

考虑的愿景,如果你可以在其中

种植电池会怎样 一个培养皿,或者

如果你可以给电池提供遗传信息

,它实际上可以

随着时间的推移变得更好,并且

以环保的方式

这样做,所以回到这个鲍鱼壳

除了纳米结构之外,还有

一件事很迷人 是当

雄性和雌性鲍鱼聚在一起时,

它们会传递遗传信息

,说明这是如何制造

精美的材料 这是如何

在室温和压力下使用

与硅藻相同的无毒材料进行制造

,此处显示的是

每次硅藻复制时,玻璃状的辅助结构都会

提供遗传

信息,说明如何

在海洋中制造玻璃

完美的纳米结构,你可以

一遍又一遍地

做同样的事情如果你可以用

太阳能电池或电池做同样的事情我想说我

最喜欢的生物材料我四岁的

女士,但任何曾经有过的人 或者没有

小孩 其他非常复杂的

有机体 所以如果你想

说服他们做他们

不想做的事情是非常困难的,

所以当我们考虑

未来的技术时,我们实际上会想到

使用细菌和病毒简单的

有机体你能 说服他们

使用一个新的工具箱,这样他们就可以

建造一个对我来说很重要的结构,

我们还考虑

未来的技术,我们从

地球的起源开始,基本上花了

十亿年的时间才在地球上拥有生命,

而且他们很快 变成

多细胞的,它们可以复制它们

可以使用光合作用作为

获取能源的一种方式,但

直到大约 5 亿年前

的寒武纪地质时期

海洋中的生物在此

之前就开始制造硬质材料,它们都是

柔软蓬松的结构,正是在

这段时间里,环境

中的钙、铁和硅含量增加了

,生物体学会了如何

制造硬质材料,这就是我

想要的 现在能够说服

生物学与元素周期表的其余部分一起工作

如果你看

生物学的话,有很多结构,比如你听说过的 DNA

、抗体、蛋白质和

核糖体,

它们已经是纳米结构的,所以大自然

已经给了我们

纳米尺度上非常精致的结构如果我们

可以利用它们并说服它们

不是你知道的抗体

会像艾滋病毒那样做一些事情但是如果

我们可以说服他们为我们建造太阳能

电池会怎么样,所以这里有

一些例子 天然贝壳 那些天然

生物材料 这里的鲍鱼壳

如果你折断了 你可以

看看它是纳米结构的

有硅藻制成 sio2,

它们是趋磁细菌,

可以制造用于导航的小型单畴磁铁

,所有这些的

共同点是这些材料的结构

是纳米级的,并且它们具有

编码蛋白质序列的 DNA 序列,

这为它们提供了

蓝图 能够建立这些非常

奇妙的结构 现在

回到鲍鱼壳 abilene

通过这些蛋白质制造壳 这些

蛋白质带负电荷

你可以将钙从

环境中提取出来 放下一层钙

然后是碳酸盐 钙和碳酸盐

它有氨基酸的化学序列

这说明这是如何

构建结构 这是 DNA 序列

这是蛋白质序列 为了

做到这一点所以一个有趣的想法是

如果你可以采取任何你

想要的材料或任何元素 周期

表并找到其对应的 DNA

序列 编码对应的

蛋白质

序列以构建结构但不

建造一个鲍鱼壳 建造

一些自然界从未有

机会使用的东西,所以

这是元素周期表,我

非常喜欢

每年为

麻省理工学院新生上课的元素周期表,我有一个元素周期表,可以

说欢迎 麻省理工学院现在你在你的

元素中,你把它翻过来,它是

具有不同电荷的 pH 值的氨基酸

,所以

我把我们提供给成千上万的人

,我知道它说麻省理工学院这是加州技术,

但是 如果人们想要的话,我还有一些额外的

东西,我真的很幸运

奥巴马总统今年访问了我的实验室

并访问了麻省理工学院,我真的很想

给他一个元素周期表,所以我

熬夜并和我丈夫交谈

你怎么知道给奥巴马总统

周期表如果他说我已经

有一个我已经记住了

所以他来参观实验室然后环顾

四周这是一次很棒的访问

然后我说先生我想给 你

元素周期表,以防万一你

遇到麻烦并需要计算

分子量,我认为

分子量听起来比摩尔

质量少得多,所以他

看了看,他说谢谢,我会定期查看

后来在他关于清洁能源的一次演讲中,

p 把它拿出来说

看看麻省理工学院的人,他们给出

元素周期表,所以基本上我没有

告诉你的是,大约 5 亿

年前,有机体开始制造

材料 但他花了大约 5000

万年才变得擅长

大约花了 5000 万年才学会

如何完美地制作鲍鱼壳

这对研究生来说很难卖

我有这个伟大的项目 5000

万年,所以我们有 为了开发

一种尝试更快地做到这一点的方法

,我们使用一种

称为 m13 噬菌体的无毒病毒这项工作

是感染具有简单

DNA 结构的细菌,我们可以进入并剪切和

粘贴额外的 DNA 序列

通过这样做,它允许病毒

表达随机蛋白质序列,

这是非常简单的生物技术,

你基本上可以这样做十亿

次,所以你可以进入

十亿不同的病毒,它们在基因上都是

相同的,但它们

不同于 彼此基于他们

对一个序列的提示,该序列现在编码一种

蛋白质

在选择

进化的过程中,你可以从

十亿中抽出一个做你想做的事情,

比如制造电池或

太阳能电池,所以基本上

病毒无法自我复制,

一旦你找到了一个宿主,它们就需要一个宿主

十亿个你感染一个细菌

,你制造了数百万个

特定序列的拷贝,

所以生物学的另一件美妙的

事情是生物学给了你

真正的 exq uisite 结构很好的链接

尺度,这些病毒又长又

瘦,我们可以让它们表达

出生长

半导体或电池材料之类的能力

纳米管,因此病毒的一部分

抓住碳纳米管,病毒的另一部分

具有可以生长

电池电极材料的序列,

然后将自身连接到

集电器,因此通过

选择进化过程,我们从

能够 让病毒制造出一种

糟糕的电池来制造病毒 它制造出良好的

电池 制造出

破纪录的高功率电池

基本上都是在室温下

在工作台上制造的 然后

电池去了白宫 参加

新闻发布会,我把它带到这里

你可以看到它在这种情况

下正在点亮这个 LED 如果我们可以

缩放它,你真的可以用它

来驱动你的跑步吗? 我们的普锐斯(Prius)

是我的梦想,能够驾驶

病毒驱动的汽车,但

基本上你可以

在十亿分之一的情况下拉出一辆,你可以对其进行

大量放大,基本上

你在实验室进行放大

然后你让它自组装成一个

像电池一样的结构,我们也可以

通过催化来做到这一点这是

光催化分解

水的例子,我们能够做的是

设计一种病毒,使其基本上死亡

吸收分子并将它们排列

在病毒表面就像

天线一样,你可以

在病毒中传递能量,然后我们给它

第二个基因来生长一种无机

材料,可以用来将水

分解成氧气和氢气 可

用于清洁燃料,我

举了一个例子,今天我的

学生向我保证它会起作用这些

是病毒组装的纳米线,当你

照射它们时,你可以开始看到

它们在这种情况下冒泡 你看到

氧气气泡出来了,基本上通过

控制牛仔裤你可以控制

多种材料来提高你的

设备性能最后一个例子我们的

太阳能电池你也可以用太阳能电池来做到这一点

我们已经能够设计

病毒来吸收碳 纳米管,

然后基本上在它们周围生长二氧化钛,

并用作

通过设备获取电子的一种方式,我们

发现通过基因工程,我们

实际上可以

提高这些太阳能电池的效率,以记录

这些类型的

染料敏化系统的数量 我还带来

了其中一个,你可以

在外面玩,所以这

是一个基于病毒的太阳能电池,经过

进化和选择,我们把它从

基本上效率为 8% 的

太阳能电池变成了效率为 11% 的

太阳能电池,所以我希望 我已经让

你相信,关于

大自然如何制造材料和获取

下一步看看你是否可以

强制或是否可以

利用大自然制造材料的方式来制造

大自然从未

梦想过的东西谢谢你