Accessibility links

Breaking News

Plant Your Mobile Charger in the Dirt


Using Plant Power to Charge a Phone
please wait

No media source currently available

0:00 0:02:07 0:00

As free as they make us, mobile phones still need to stay close to a power source. Soon that may change with “green” power. VOA’s Jessica Berman reports.

Using Plant Power to Charge a Phone
please wait

No media source currently available

0:00 0:01:21 0:00

Three university students in Santiago, Chile have developed a plant-powered device to charge their mobile phones.

The three engineering students got the idea for the device while sitting in their school's courtyard. Their invention is a small biological circuit they call E-Kaia. It captures the energy plants produce during photosynthesis.

A plant uses only a small part of the energy produced by that process. The rest goes into the soil. E-Kaia collects that energy. The device plugs into the ground and then into a mobile phone.

The E-Kaia solved two problems for the engineering students. They needed an idea for a class project. They also needed an outlet to plug in their phones.

One of the student inventors, Camila Rupcich, says the device changes the energy released from the plant into low-level power to charge phones.

The E-Kaia is able to fully recharge a mobile phone in less than two hours.

I’m Jonathan Evans.

VOA’s Jessica Berman reported this story from Washington. Jonathan Evans adapted it for Learning English. Caty Weaver was the editor.

_____________________________________________________________

Words in This Story

courtyard n. an open space that is surrounded completely or partly by a building or group of buildings

circuit n. the complete path that an electric current travels along

photosynthesis n. the process by which a green plant turns water and carbon dioxide into food when the plant is exposed to light

XS
SM
MD
LG