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Build a Microbial Fuel Cell at Home

IgniteLiving

Bacteria that make electricity, right on your kitchen table. Build a living battery from mud, jars and a couple of electrodes.

2u

duration

€ 20

budget

Ignite

pace

A microbial fuel cell is one of those experiments that sounds like science fiction and turns out to be genuinely doable at home. It's a biological battery: bacteria in ordinary mud break down organic matter and, as they do, release electrons you can capture as electricity. With a few jars, some graphite electrodes and a bit of patience, you can watch nature power a circuit.

You'll build two chambers connected by a salt bridge or agar gel, which keeps them separate while letting ions pass. One jar holds a mud slurry with a graphite anode buried in it, where the bacteria do their work. The other chamber holds the cathode. Wire the electrodes together, and if you've got a multimeter, clip it on to read the voltage. The real magic takes time: leave the setup undisturbed so bacteria colonize the anode, and the power output climbs over days. It's a small, quiet demonstration of life turning into current.

by PlayTryBe team

Gather your materials: two plastic containers or jars, graphite rods or carbon cloth for electrodes, an aquarium air pump, salt bridge or agar gel, wire, alligator clips and a multimeter if you have one.

Prepare the salt bridge or agar gel to link the chambers. Fill one jar with mud and water to make a slurry and bury a graphite electrode in it as your anode.

Set up the second chamber with the cathode, connect the electrodes with wire and alligator clips, and clip on a multimeter to read the voltage if you have one.

pause

Leave the setup undisturbed. Over several days the bacteria colonize the anode and the power output steadily climbs.

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PaceIgnite
Duration2u
Budget€ 20