Soil-Powered Computing

Author:

Yen Bill1ORCID,Jaliff Laura1ORCID,Gutierrez Louis2ORCID,Sahinidis Philothei3ORCID,Bernstein Sadie1ORCID,Madden John4ORCID,Taylor Stephen4ORCID,Josephson Colleen4ORCID,Pannuto Pat2ORCID,Shuai Weitao1ORCID,Wells George1ORCID,Arora Nivedita1ORCID,Hester Josiah5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Northwestern University, Illinois, USA

2. UC San Diego, California, USA

3. Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia, USA

4. UC Santa Cruz, California, USA

5. Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, USA

Abstract

Human-caused climate degradation and the explosion of electronic waste have pushed the computing community to explore fundamental alternatives to the current battery-powered, over-provisioned ubiquitous computing devices that need constant replacement and recharging. Soil Microbial Fuel Cells (SMFCs) offer promise as a renewable energy source that is biocompatible and viable in difficult environments where traditional batteries and solar panels fall short. However, SMFC development is in its infancy, and challenges like robustness to environmental factors and low power output stymie efforts to implement real-world applications in terrestrial environments. This work details a 2-year iterative process that uncovers barriers to practical SMFC design for powering electronics, which we address through a mechanistic understanding of SMFC theory from the literature. We present nine months of deployment data gathered from four SMFC experiments exploring cell geometries, resulting in an improved SMFC that generates power across a wider soil moisture range. From these experiments, we extracted key lessons and a testing framework, assessed SMFC's field performance, contextualized improvements with emerging and existing computing systems, and demonstrated the improved SMFC powering a wireless sensor for soil moisture and touch sensing. We contribute our data, methodology, and designs to establish the foundation for a sustainable, soil-powered future.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Agricultural and Food Research Initiative

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Computer Networks and Communications,Hardware and Architecture,Human-Computer Interaction

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