Plants have important things to say, and University of Utah electrical and computer engineering associate professor Hanseup Kim wants to listen to them.
He leads a team of engineers who have received a $2.2-million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to design and build small chemical sensors that can "sniff" out when a plant is being attacked by insects or overwhelmed by weeds. The research is to benefit the production of biomass from corn, which is used to create ethanol for gasoline.
"I want to communicate with plants, and I want to know what they are feeling or know what they are going through," Kim says. "I believe that my research team can do this by building a communication loop with these sensors and the corn."
The research is based on a concept that corn stalks emit certain organic compounds when they are broken or damaged. So when insects like grasshoppers begin to chomp on corn stalks, these compounds are discharged so that predators can sense when insects are nearby, a type of natural defense mechanism for the plant, Kim says.
The team will be developing a low-power sensor that detects when these chemicals are present, alerting a farmer that insects must be attacking a section of the cornfield. The sensors, which will be connected to a network, will also potentially reveal when weeds begin to grow because those pesky plants also emit gases when they germinate.
Near the end of the three-year research project, Kim wants to conduct a trial with the sensors on a 200-by-200-meter section of a cornfield at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, which is collaborating with the University of Utah. Other researchers on the team include University of Utah electrical and computer engineering professor Carlos Mastrangelo, assistant professor Mingyue Ji, materials science and engineering professor Ling Zang, and University of Nebraska-Lincoln agronomy and horticulture assistant professor James Schnable.
The chemical sensors will be based on a design that Kim has already been working on—devices that operate on only 100 picowatts (a picowatt is one million millionth of a watt) as a standby power and turn on only when they detect a trace of the chemical. These sensors could operate in a cornfield for an entire season without having to change a button-sized battery. They were developed for hard-to-reach areas such as in water pipes to look for toxins or in forests to detect fires.
While the grant, which is from the DoE's Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E), is focused on the production of corn for biomass, Kim says this technology could benefit all forms of farming. This type of high-tech system for agriculture, known as Smart Farming, can help farmers produce the best crops through the use of data analysis, drones, robotics, and the Internet of Things.
"Farmers can use less pesticides and herbicides, and that means lower costs for them while producing a higher yield of healthier foods," Kim says. "Currently, a major loss in crops is because of insects and weeds."
In 2017, biomass fuels provided about 5 percent of total primary energy use in the U.S., according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Of that, about 47% was from biofuels (mainly ethanol from corn). Most car gasoline sold in the U.S. uses about 10 percent ethanol.
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