Students and staff will use the urinal to fuel microbial fuel cell (MFC) stacks that generate electricity to power indoor lighting.

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A university and Oxfam are showing the world the benefit of pee power, which could be used to light up the world's refugee camps through urine. The university involved previously demonstrated how urine could be used to power a mobile phone.

A toilet, conveniently situated near the student union bar at the University of the West of England (UWE Bristol) is proving pee can generate electricity.

The prototype urinal is the result of a partnership between researchers at UWE Bristol and Oxfam. It is hoped the pee power technology can be used to light cubicles in refugee camps, which are often dark and dangerous places, particularly for women.

Students and staff will use the urinal to fuel microbial fuel cell (MFC) stacks that generate electricity to power indoor lighting. The research team is led by professor Ioannis Ieropoulos, director of the Bristol BioEnergy Centre, located in the Bristol Robotics Laboratory at UWE Bristol.

Ieropoulos said: We have already proved that this way of generating electricity works. Work by the Bristol BioEnergy Centre hit the headlines in 2013 when the team demonstrated that electricity generated by microbial fuel cell stacks could power a mobile phone. This exciting project with Oxfam could have a huge impact in refugee camps.

The microbial fuel cells work by employing live microbes which feed on urine (the fuel) for their own growth and maintenance. The MFC is in effect a system which taps a portion of that biochemical energy used for microbial growth, and converts that directly into electricity - what the researchers are calling urine-tricity or pee power.

Ieropoulos said: This technology is about as green as it gets, as we do not need to utilise fossil fuels and we are effectively using a waste product that will be in plentiful supply.

The urinal on the university campus resembles a toilet used in refugee camps by Oxfam to make the trial as realistic as possible. The technology that converts the urine into power sits underneath the urinal and can be viewed through a clear screen.

See the original post here:
Oxfam and UWE show how pee power can be used to light up refugee camps

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March 7, 2015 at 5:52 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Indoor Lighting