Imagine wrapping paper that could be a gift in and of itself because it 
lights up with words like "Happy Birthday." That is one potential 
application of a new biodegradable battery made of cellulose, the stuff 
of paper.
Scientists worldwide are striving to develop thin, 
flexible, lightweight, inexpensive, environmentally friendly batteries 
made entirely from nonmetal parts. Among the most promising materials 
for these batteries are conducting polymers.
However, until now 
these have impractical for use in batteries — for instance, their 
ability to hold a charge often degrades over use.
Easy to make
The
 key to this new battery turned out to be an often bothersome green 
algae known as Cladophora. Rotting heaps of this hairlike freshwater 
plant throughout the world can lead to unsightly, foul-smelling beaches.
This
 algae makes an unusual kind of cellulose typified by a very large 
surface area, 100 times that of the cellulose found in paper. This 
allowed researchers to dramatically increase the amount of conducting 
polymer available for use in the new device, enabling it to better 
recharge, hold and discharge electricity.
"We have long hoped to 
find some sort of constructive use for the material from algae blooms 
and have now been shown this to be possible," said researcher Maria 
Strømme, a nanotechnologist at Uppsala University in Sweden. "This 
creates new possibilities for large-scale production of environmentally 
friendly, cost-effective, lightweight energy storage systems."
The
 new batteries consisted of extremely thin layers of conducting polymer 
just 40 to 50 nanometers or billionths of a meter wide coating algae 
cellulose fibers only 20 to 30 nanometers wide that were collected into 
paper sheets.
"They're very easy to make," Strømme said.
Quick to charge
They
 could hold 50 to 200 percent more charge than similar conducting 
polymer batteries, and once better optimized, they might even be 
competitive with commercial lithium batteries, the researchers noted. 
They also recharged much faster than conventional rechargeable batteries
 — while a regular battery takes at least an hour to recharge, the new 
batteries could recharge in anywhere from eight minutes to just 11 
seconds.
The new battery also showed a dramatic boost in the 
ability to hold a charge over use. While a comparable polymer battery 
showed a 50 percent drop in the amount of charge it could hold after 60 
cycles of discharging and recharging, the new battery showed just a 6 
percent loss through 100 charging cycles.
"When you have thick 
polymer layers, it's hard to get all the material to recharge properly, 
and it turns into an insulator, so you lose capacity," said researcher 
Gustav Nyström, an electrochemist at Uppsala University. "When you have 
thin layers, you can get it fully discharged and recharged."
Flexible electronics
The
 researchers suggest their batteries appear well-suited for applications
 involving flexible electronics, such as clothing and packaging.
"We're
 not focused on replacing lithium ion batteries — we want to find new 
applications where batteries are not used today," Strømme told 
LiveScience. "What if you could put batteries inside wallpaper to charge
 sensors in your home? If you could put this into clothes, can you 
couple that with detectors to analyze sweat from your body to tell if 
there's anything wrong?"
Future directions of research include 
seeing how much charge these batteries lose over time, a problem with 
polymer batteries and all batteries in general. They also want to see 
how much they can scale up these batteries, "see if we can make them 
much, much larger," Strømme said.
The scientists detailed their last month in the journal Nano Letters.
