Rather startling and also
apparently unique, the oriental hornet uses it yellow and orange banding to tap
solar energy during peak times allowing it to prosper at a time period when the
same conditions suppress the competition.
We may or may not be able to use
the method ourselves but the surprise is that the solar process produces
electricity rather than chemical reagents.
Who would have thought that at all?
This particular insect promises
to be a trove of curious phenomena well worth the effort.
Is the hornet our key to renewable energy?
Jan 7, 2011
As every middle-school child knows, in the process of photosynthesis,
plants take the sun's energy and convert it to electrical energy. Now a Tel
Aviv University team has demonstrated how a member of the animal kingdom, the
Oriental hornet, takes the sun's energy and converts it into electric power —
in the brown and yellow parts of its body — as well.
"The interesting thing here is that a living biological creature
does a thing like that," says physicist Prof. David Bergman of Tel Aviv
University's School of Physics and Astronomy, who was part of the team that
made discovery. "The hornet may have discovered things we do not yet
know." In partnership with the late Prof. Jacob Ishay of the university's
Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Prof. Bergman and his doctoral candidate Marian
Plotkin engaged in a truly interdisciplinary research project to explain the
biological processes that turn a hornet's abdomen into solar cells.
The research team made the discovery several years ago, and recently
tried to mimic it.
The results show that the
hornet's body shell, or exoskeleton, is able to harvest solar energy. They were
recently published in the German journal Naturwissenschaften.
Discovering a new system for renewable energy?
Previously, entomologists noted that Oriental wasps, unlike other wasps
and bees, are active in the afternoon rather than the morning when the sun is
just rising. They also noticed that the hornet digs more intensely as the sun's
intensity increases.
Taking this information to the lab, the Tel Aviv University team studied weather
conditions like temperature, humidity and solar radiation to determine if and
how these factors also affected the hornet's behavior, but found that UVB
radiation alone dictated the change.
In the course of their research, the Tel Aviv University team also found that the
yellow and brown stripes on the hornet abdomen enable a photo-voltaic effect:
the brown and yellow stripes on the hornet abdomen can absorb solar radiation,
and the yellow pigment transforms that into electric power.
The team determined that the brown shell of the hornet was made from
grooves that split light into diverging beams. The yellow stripe on the abdomen
is made from pinhole depressions, and contains a pigment called xanthopterin.
Together, the light diverging grooves, pinhole depressions and xanthopterin
change light into electrical energy. The shell traps the light and the pigment
does the conversion.
A biological heat pump
The researchers also found a number of energy processes unique to the
insect. Like air conditioners and refrigerators, the hornet has a
well-developed heat pump system in its body which keeps it cooler than the
outside temperature while it forages in the sun. This is something that's not
easy to do, says Prof. Bergman.
To see if the solar collecting prowess of the hornet could be
duplicated, the team imitated the structure of the hornet's body but had poor
results in achieving the same high efficiency rates of energy collection. In
the future, they plan to refine the model to see if this
"bio-mimicry" can give clues to novel renewable energy solutions.
The research team also discovered that hornets use finely honed
acoustic signals to guide them so they can build their combs with extraordinary
precision in total darkness. Bees can at least see what they are doing,
explains Prof. Bergman, but hornets cannot — it's totally dark inside a hornet
nest.
Source: American
Friends Tel Aviv University.
Nice one!!
ReplyDeleteSolar pv