Project biology electricity in living organisms. Presentation on the topic "electricity in wildlife"

We continue to publish popular science lectures given by young university teachers who received grants from the V. Potanin Charitable Foundation. This time we present to our readers a summary of the lecture given by Associate Professor of the Department of Human and Animal Physiology at Saratov State University. N. G. Chernyshevsky Candidate of Biological Sciences Oksana Semyachkina-Glushkovskaya.

Living power plants

Electricity plays a sometimes invisible but vital role in the existence of many organisms, including humans.

Surprisingly, electricity entered our lives thanks to animals, in particular electric fish. For example, the electrophysiological direction in medicine is based on the use of electric stingrays in medical procedures. Living sources of electricity were first introduced into his medical practice by the famous ancient Roman physician Claudius Galen. The son of a wealthy architect, Galen received, along with a good education, an impressive inheritance, which allowed him to travel for several years along the shores of the Mediterranean Sea. One day, in one of the small villages, Galen saw a strange sight: two local residents were walking towards him with stingrays tied to their heads. This “painkiller” found use in treating the wounds of gladiators in Rome, where Galen returned after completing his journey. The peculiar physiotherapy procedures turned out to be so effective that even Emperor Mark Antony, who suffered from back pain, risked using an unusual method of treatment. Having gotten rid of a debilitating illness, the emperor appointed Galen as his personal physician.

However, many electric fish use electricity for far from peaceful purposes, in particular to kill their prey.

For the first time, Europeans encountered monstrous living power plants in the jungles of South America. A party of adventurers who penetrated the upper reaches of the Amazon came across many small streams. But as soon as one of the expedition members stepped foot into the warm water of the stream, he fell unconscious and remained in this state for two days. It was all about the electric eels that live in these latitudes. Amazonian electric eels, reaching three meters in length, are capable of generating electricity with a voltage of more than 550 V. An electric shock in fresh water stuns prey, which usually consists of fish and frogs, but can also kill a person and even a horse if they are nearby at the moment of discharge eel

It is unknown when humanity would have seriously taken up electricity if not for an amazing incident that happened to the wife of the famous Bolognese professor Luigi Galvani. It's no secret that Italians are famous for their wide taste preferences. Therefore, they are not averse to sometimes playing with frog legs. The day was stormy and a strong wind was blowing. When Senora Galvani entered the butcher shop, a terrible picture was revealed to her eyes. The legs of the dead frogs, as if alive, twitched when they touched the iron railings with a strong gust of wind. The senora bothered her husband so much with her stories about the butcher’s proximity to evil spirits that the professor decided to find out for himself what was really going on.

This was that very happy occasion that immediately changed the life of the Italian anatomist and physiologist. Having brought home the frog's legs, Galvani became convinced of the veracity of his wife's words: they really twitched when they touched iron objects. At that time the professor was only 34 years old. He spent the next 25 years trying to find a reasonable explanation for this amazing phenomenon. The result of many years of work was the book “Treatises on the Power of Electricity in Muscular Movement,” which became a real bestseller and excited the minds of many researchers. For the first time they started talking about the fact that there is electricity in each of us and that it is the nerves that are a kind of “electrical wires”. It seemed to Galvani that the muscles accumulate electricity in themselves, and when they contract, they emit it. This hypothesis required further research. But political events associated with Napoleon Bonaparte's rise to power prevented the professor from completing his experiments. Due to his freethinking, Galvani was expelled from the university in dishonor and a year after these tragic events he died at the age of sixty-one.

And yet, fate wished that Galvani’s works would find their continuation. Galvani's compatriot Alessandro Volta, having read his book, came to the idea that chemical processes are the basis of living electricity, and created the prototype of the batteries we are familiar with.

Biochemistry of electricity

Two more centuries passed before humanity managed to uncover the secret of living electricity. Until the electron microscope was invented, scientists could not even imagine that there was a real “customs” around the cell with its own strict “passport control” rules. The membrane of an animal cell is a thin shell that is not visible to the naked eye, having semi-permeable properties, it is a reliable guarantor of preserving the viability of the cell (maintaining its homeostasis).

But let's return to electricity. What is the relationship between the cell membrane and living electricity?

So, the first half of the 20th century, 1936. In England, zoologist John Young publishes a method for dissecting the nerve fiber of a cephalopod. The fiber diameter reached 1 mm. This “giant” nerve, visible to the eye, retained the ability to conduct electricity even outside the body in sea water. This is the “golden key” with the help of which the door to the secrets of living electricity will be opened. Only three years passed, and Jung's compatriots - Professor Andrew Huxley and his student Alan Hodgkin, armed with electrodes, carried out a series of experiments on this nerve, the results of which changed the worldview and “lit the green light” on the path to electrophysiology.

The starting point in these studies was Galvani's book, namely his description of the damage current: if a muscle is cut, then the electric current “pouring out” from it, which stimulates its contraction. In order to repeat these experiments on the nerve, Huxley pierced the membrane of the nerve cell with two hair-thin electrodes, thus placing them in its contents (cytoplasm). But bad luck! He was unable to register electrical signals. Then he took out the electrodes and placed them on the surface of the nerve. The results were sad: absolutely nothing. It seemed that fortune had turned away from the scientists. The last option remained - place one electrode inside the nerve and leave the other on its surface. And here it is, a happy occasion! After just 0.0003 seconds, an electrical impulse was recorded from a living cell. It was obvious that in such an instant the impulse could not arise again. This meant only one thing: the charge was concentrated on a resting, undamaged cell.

In subsequent years, similar experiments were carried out on countless other cells. It turned out that all cells are charged and that the charge of the membrane is an integral attribute of its life. As long as the cell is alive, it has a charge. However, it was still unclear how the cell is charged? Long before Huxley's experiments, the Russian physiologist N. A. Bernstein (1896–1966) published his book “Electrobiology” (1912). In it, like a seer, he theoretically revealed the main secret of living electricity - the biochemical mechanisms of the formation of a cell charge. Surprisingly, a few years later this hypothesis was brilliantly confirmed in Huxley’s experiments, for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize. So what are these mechanisms?

As you know, everything ingenious is simple. This turned out to be the case in this case as well. Our body consists of 70% water, or rather, a solution of salts and proteins. If you look inside the cell, it turns out that its contents are oversaturated with K + ions (there are about 50 times more of them inside than outside). Between cells, in the intercellular space, Na + ions predominate (there are about 20 times more of them here than in the cell). Such disequilibrium is actively maintained by the membrane, which, like a regulator, allows some ions to pass through its “gate” and does not allow others to pass through.

The membrane, like a sponge cake, consists of two loose layers of complex fats (phospholipids), the thickness of which is penetrated like beads by proteins that perform a wide variety of functions, in particular they can serve as a kind of “gate” or channels. These proteins have holes inside them that can open and close using special mechanisms. Each type of ion has its own channels. For example, the movement of K + ions is possible only through K + channels, and Na + - through Na + channels.

When the cell is at rest, the green light is on for K + ions and they freely leave the cell through their channels, heading to where there are few of them in order to balance their concentration. Remember your school experience in physics? If you take a glass of water and drop diluted potassium permanganate (potassium permanganate) into it, then after a while the molecules of the dye will evenly fill the entire volume of the glass, turning the water pink. A classic example of diffusion. In a similar way, this happens with K + ions, which are in excess in the cell and always have a free exit through the membrane. Na+ ions, like a person non grata, do not have privileges from the resting cell membrane. At this moment, for them the membrane is like an impregnable fortress, which is almost impossible to penetrate, since all Na + channels are closed.

But what does electricity have to do with it, you say? The thing is that, as noted above, our body consists of dissolved salts and proteins. In this case we are talking about salts. What is dissolved salt? This is a duo of interconnected positive cations and negative acid anions. For example, a solution of potassium chloride is K + and Cl –, etc. By the way, saline solution, which is widely used in medicine for intravenous infusions, is a solution of sodium chloride - NaCl (table salt) at a concentration of 0.9%.

Under natural conditions, K + or Na + ions simply do not exist alone; they are always found with acid anions - SO 4 2–, Cl –, PO 4 3–, etc., and under normal conditions the membrane is impermeable to negative particles. This means that when K + ions move through their channels, the anions associated with them, like magnets, are drawn behind them, but, unable to get out, accumulate on the inner surface of the membrane. Since Na + ions, that is, positively charged particles, predominate outside the cell, in the intercellular space, plus K + ions constantly leak into them, an excess positive charge is concentrated on the outer surface of the membrane, and a negative one on its inner surface. So a cell at rest “artificially” restrains the imbalance of two important ions - K + and Na +, due to which the membrane is polarized due to the difference in charges on both sides. The cell's resting state charge is called the resting membrane potential, which is approximately -70 mV. It was this magnitude of charge that was first recorded by Huxley on the giant nerve of a mollusk.

When it became clear where the “electricity” comes from in a cell at rest, the question immediately arose: where does it go if the cell is working, for example, when our muscles contract? The truth lay on the surface. It was enough to look inside the cell at the moment of its excitement. When a cell reacts to external or internal influences, at that moment all Na + channels open with lightning speed, as if on command, and Na + ions, like a snowball, rush into the cell in a fraction of a second. Thus, in an instant, in a state of cell excitation, Na + ions balance their concentration on both sides of the membrane, K + ions still slowly leave the cell. The release of K+ ions is so slow that when the Na+ ion finally breaks through the impenetrable walls of the membrane, there are still quite a lot of them left there. Now inside the cell, namely on the inner surface of the membrane, an excess positive charge will be concentrated. On its outer surface there will be a negative charge, because, as in the case of K +, a whole army of negative anions will rush behind Na +, for which the membrane is still impenetrable. Held on its outer surface by electrostatic forces of attraction, these “fragments” of salts will create a negative electric field here. This means that at the moment of cell excitation we will observe a charge reversal, that is, a change in its sign to the opposite one. This explains why the charge changes from negative to positive when a cell is excited.

There is another important point that Galvani described in ancient times, but could not correctly explain. When Galvani damaged a muscle, it contracted. Then it seemed to him that this was a current of damage and it was “pouring out” from the muscle. To some extent, his words were prophetic. The cell actually loses its charge when it works. Charge exists only when there is a difference between the concentrations of Na + /K + ions. When the cell is excited, the number of Na + ions on both sides of the membrane is the same, and K + tends to the same state. That is why when the cell is excited, the charge decreases and becomes equal to +40 mV.

When the riddle of “excitation” was solved, another question inevitably arose: how does the cell return to normal? How does the charge appear on it again? After all, she doesn’t die after working. And indeed, a few years later they found this mechanism. It turned out to be a protein embedded in the membrane, but it was an unusual protein. On the one hand, it looked the same as channel squirrels. On the other hand, unlike its brothers, this protein “charged dearly for its work,” namely energy, so valuable for the cell. Moreover, the energy suitable for its operation must be special, in the form of ATP (adenosine triphosphoric acid) molecules. These molecules are specially synthesized at the “energy stations” of the cell - mitochondria, carefully stored there and, if necessary, delivered to their destination with the help of special carriers. The energy from these “warheads” is released during their disintegration and is spent on various needs of the cell. In particular, in our case, this energy is required for the work of a protein called Na/K-ATPase, the main function of which is, like a shuttle, to transport Na + out of the cell, and K + in the opposite direction.

Thus, in order to restore lost strength, you need to work. Think about it, there is a real paradox hidden here. When a cell works, this process occurs passively at the level of the cell membrane, and in order to rest, it requires energy.

How nerves “talk” to each other

If you prick your finger, your hand will immediately withdraw. That is, with a mechanical effect on skin receptors, the excitation that arises at a given local point reaches the brain and returns back to the periphery so that we can adequately respond to the situation. This is an example of an innate response, or unconditioned reflexes, which includes many defensive responses such as blinking, coughing, sneezing, scratching, etc.

How can excitation, having arisen on the membrane of one cell, be able to move on? Before answering this question, let's get acquainted with the structure of a nerve cell - a neuron, the meaning of “life” of which is to conduct excitation or nerve impulses.

So, a neuron, like a flying comet, consists of a nerve cell body, around which there are many small processes - dendrites, and a long “tail” - an axon. It is these processes that serve as a kind of wires through which “living current” flows. Since this entire complex structure is a single cell, the processes of a neuron have the same set of ions as its body. What is the process of excitation of a local region of a neuron? This is a kind of disturbance of the “calmness” of its external and internal environment, expressed in the form of directed movement of ions. Excitation, having arisen in the place where the stimulus occurred, spreads further along the chain according to the same principles as in this area. Only now the stimulus for neighboring areas will not be an external stimulus, but internal processes caused by the flow of Na + and K + ions and changes in the membrane charge. This process is similar to how waves propagate from a pebble thrown into water. Just as in the case of a pebble, biocurrents along the nerve fiber membrane spread in circular waves, causing excitation of increasingly distant areas.

In the experiment, excitation from a local point propagates further in both directions. In real conditions, nerve impulses are carried out unidirectionally. This is due to the fact that the area that has been worked needs rest. And the rest of a nerve cell, as we already know, is active and associated with energy expenditure. Excitation of a cell is the “loss” of its charge. That is why, as soon as a cell works, its ability to excite drops sharply. This period is called refractory, from the French word refractaire- unresponsive. Such immunity can be absolute (immediately after excitation) or relative (as the membrane charge is restored), when it is possible to cause a response, but by excessively strong stimuli.

If you ask yourself what color our brain is, it turns out that the vast majority of it, with a few exceptions, is gray and white. The bodies and short processes of nerve cells are gray, and the long processes are white. They are white because there is additional insulation on top of them in the form of “fat” or myelin pads. Where do these pillows come from? Around the neuron there are special cells named after the German neurophysiologist who first described them - Schwann cells. They, like nannies, help the neuron grow and, in particular, secrete myelin, which is a kind of “fat” or lipid, which carefully wraps the areas of the growing neuron. However, this outfit does not cover the entire surface of the long process, but separate areas, between which the axon remains bare. The exposed areas are called nodes of Ranvier.

It’s interesting, but the speed of excitation depends on how the nerve process is “dressed.” It is not difficult to guess - a special “uniform” exists in order to increase the efficiency of the passage of biocurrents along the nerve. Indeed, if in gray dendrites the excitation moves like a turtle (from 0.5 to 3 m/s), sequentially, without missing a single section, then in the white axon nerve impulses jump along the “bare” areas of Ranvier, which significantly increases the speed of their conduction up to 120 m/s. Such fast nerves innervate mainly the muscles, providing protection to the body. Internal organs do not need such speed. For example, the bladder can stretch for a long time and send impulses about its fullness, while the hand must immediately withdraw from the fire, otherwise it threatens damage.

The adult brain weighs on average 1300 g. This mass is made up of 10 10 nerve cells. Such a huge number of neurons! By what mechanisms does excitation travel from one cell to another?

Unraveling the mystery of communication in the nervous system has its own history. In the mid-19th century, French physiologist Claude Bernard received a valuable parcel from South America containing curare poison, the same poison that the Indians used to smear their arrowheads. The scientist was keen on studying the effects of poisons on the body. It was known that an animal struck by such a poison dies from suffocation due to paralysis of the respiratory muscles, but no one knew exactly how the lightning-fast killer worked. In order to understand this, Bernard performed a simple experiment. He dissolved the poison in a Petri dish, placed a muscle with a nerve there and saw that if only the nerve is immersed in the poison, the muscle remains healthy and can still work. If you poison only a muscle with poison, then even in this case its ability to contract is preserved. And only when the area between the nerve and the muscle was placed in the poison, a typical picture of poisoning could be observed: the muscle became unable to contract even under very strong electrical influences. It became obvious that there was a “gap” between the nerve and the muscle, which is where the poison acts.

It turned out that such “gaps” can be found anywhere in the body; the entire neural network is literally permeated with them. Other substances were also found, such as nicotine, which selectively acted on the mysterious places between the nerve and the muscle, causing it to contract. At first, these invisible connections were called the myoneural connection, and later the English neurophysiologist Charles Sherrington gave them the name synapses, from the Latin word synapsis- connection, connection. However, the final point in this story was put by the Austrian pharmacologist Otto Lewy, who managed to find an intermediary between nerve and muscle. They say that he dreamed that a certain substance was “pouring out” from the nerve and causing the muscle to work. The next morning, he firmly decided: he needed to look for this particular substance. And he found it! Everything turned out to be quite simple. Levi took two hearts and isolated the largest nerve on one of them - nervus vagus. Foreseeing in advance that something would stand out from it, he connected these two “muscle motors” with a system of tubes and began to irritate the nerve. Levi knew that his irritation made his heart stop. However, not only the heart on which the irritated nerve acted stopped, but also the second one connected to it by the solution. A little later, Levi managed to isolate this substance in its pure form, which was called “acetylcholine”. Thus, irrefutable evidence was found of the presence of an intermediary in the “conversation” between nerve and muscle. This discovery was awarded the Nobel Prize.

And then everything went much faster. It turned out that the principle of communication between nerves and muscles discovered by Levy is universal. With the help of such a system, not only nerves and muscles communicate, but also the nerves themselves communicate with each other. However, despite the fact that the principle of such communication is the same, intermediaries, or, as they were later called, mediators (from the Latin word mediator- intermediary), may be different. Each nerve has its own, like a pass. This pattern was established by the English pharmacologist Henry Dale, for which he was also awarded the Nobel Prize. So, the language of neural communication became clear; all that remained was to see what this design looked like.

How does a synapse work?

If we look at a neuron through an electron microscope, we will see that it is like a Christmas tree, all hung with some kind of buttons. There can be up to 10,000 such “buttons”, or, as you may have guessed, synapses on just one neuron. Let’s take a closer look at one of them. What will we see? At the terminal portion of the neuron, the long process thickens, so it appears to us in the form of a button. In this thickening, the axon seems to become thinner and loses its white coat in the form of myelin. Inside the “button” there is a huge number of bubbles filled with some substance. In 1954, George Palade guessed that this was nothing more than a storage facility for mediators (20 years later he was given the Nobel Prize for this guess). When the excitation reaches the end station of the long process, the mediators are released from their confinement. Ca 2+ ions are used for this. Moving towards the membrane, they merge with it, then burst (exocytosis), and the transmitter under pressure enters the space between the two nerve cells, which is called the synaptic cleft. It is negligible, so the molecules of the mediator quickly reach the membrane of the neighboring neuron, on which in turn there are special antennas, or receptors (from the Latin word recipio - to take, accept), which capture the mediator. This happens according to the principle of “key to lock” - the geometric shape of the receptor completely corresponds to the shape of the mediator. Having exchanged a “handshake”, the mediator and receptor are forced to part. Their meeting is very short and the last for the mediator. Just a split second is enough for the transmitter to trigger excitation on a neighboring neuron, after which it is destroyed using special mechanisms. And then this story will repeat itself again and again, and so living electricity will run ad infinitum along the “nerve wires,” hiding many secrets from us and thereby attracting us with its mystery.

Is it necessary to talk about the significance of discoveries in the field of electrophysiology? Suffice it to say that seven Nobel Prizes were awarded for lifting the curtain on the world of living electricity. Today, the lion's share of the pharmaceutical industry is built on these fundamental discoveries. For example, now going to the dentist is not such a terrible ordeal. One injection of lidocaine - and the Na + channels at the injection site will be temporarily blocked. And you will no longer feel painful procedures. You have a stomach ache, the doctor will prescribe medications (no-spa, papaverine, platifilin, etc.), the basis of which is the blockade of receptors so that the mediator acetylcholine, which triggers many processes in the gastrointestinal tract, cannot contact them, and etc. Recently, a series of centrally acting pharmacological drugs aimed at improving memory, speech function and mental activity have been actively developing.

Theme of my work: Living electricity

The goal of the work was to identify ways to obtain electricity from plants and experimental confirmation of some of them.

We have set ourselves the following tasks:

To achieve the objectives, the following research methods were used: literature analysis, experimental method, comparison method.

Before electric current reaches our home, it travels a long way from the place where the current is received to the place where it is consumed. Current is generated in power plants. Power plant - an electrical station, a set of installations, equipment and apparatus used directly for the production of electrical energy, as well as the necessary structures and buildings located in a certain area.


"WORK LIVE ELECTRICITY"

Ministry of Education, Science and Youth of the Republic of Crimea

Crimean competition of research works and projects for schoolchildren in grades 5-8 “Step into Science”

Topic: Living electricity

Work completed:

Asanova Evelina Asanovna

5th grade student

Scientific adviser:

Ablyalimova Lilya Lenurovna,

biology and chemistry teacher

MBOU "Veselovskaya Secondary School"

With. Veselovka – 2017

1.Introduction……………………………………………………………..…3

2. Sources of electric current…………………………..…….……4

2.1. Non-traditional energy sources………………………….…..4

2.2. “Living” sources of electric current………………………...4

2.3. Fruits and vegetables as sources of electric current…………...5

3. Practical part……………………………..………….…………6

4. Conclusion……………………………………………………………….………..…..8

List of references……………………………………………………….9

    INTRODUCTION

Electricity and plants - what could they have in common? However, back in the middle of the 18th century, natural scientists understood: these two concepts are united by some kind of internal connection.

People encountered “living” electricity at the dawn of civilization: they knew the ability of some fish to hit prey with the help of some kind of internal force. This is evidenced by cave paintings and some Egyptian hieroglyphs depicting an electric catfish. And he wasn’t the only one singled out on this basis then. Roman doctors managed to use the “strikes” of stingrays to treat nervous diseases. Scientists have done a lot in studying the amazing interaction between electricity and living things, but nature still hides a lot from us.

Thales of Miletus was the first to draw attention to electric charge 600 years BC. He discovered that amber, rubbed with wool, will acquire the properties of attracting light objects: fluff, pieces of paper. Later it was believed that only amber had this property. The first chemical source of electric current was invented by accident, at the end of the 17th century, by the Italian scientist Luigi Galvani. In fact, the goal of Galvani’s research was not at all the search for new sources of energy, but the study of the reaction of experimental animals to various external influences. In particular, the phenomenon of the generation and flow of current was discovered when strips of two different metals were attached to the frog's leg muscle. Galvani gave an incorrect theoretical explanation for the observed process. Being a doctor, not a physicist, he saw the reason in the so-called “animal electricity”. Galvani confirmed his theory with reference to well-known cases of discharges that some living beings, for example, “electric fish,” are capable of producing.

In 1729, Charles Dufay discovered that there are two types of charges. Experiments conducted by Du Fay said that one of the charges is formed by rubbing glass on silk, and the other by rubbing resin on wool. The concept of positive and negative charge was introduced by the German naturalist Georg Christoph. The first quantitative researcher was the law of interaction of charges, experimentally established in 1785 by Charles Coulomb using the sensitive torsion balance he developed.

    SOURCES OF ELECTRIC CURRENT

Before electric current reaches our home, it travels a long way from the place where the current is received to the place where it is consumed. Current is generated in power plants. Power plant - an electrical station, a set of installations, equipment and apparatus used directly for the production of electrical energy, as well as the structures and buildings necessary for this, located in a certain territory. Depending on the energy source, there are thermal power plants (TPPs), hydroelectric power plants (HPPs), pumped storage power plants, and nuclear power plants (NPPs).

      NON-CONVENTIONAL ENERGY SOURCES

In addition to traditional current sources, there are many non-traditional sources. Electricity, in fact, can be obtained from almost anything. Non-traditional sources of electrical energy, where irreplaceable energy resources are practically not wasted: wind energy, tidal energy, solar energy.

There are other objects that at first glance have nothing to do with electricity, but can serve as a source of current.

      “LIVING” SOURCES OF ELECTRIC CURRENT

There are animals in nature that we call “living powerhouses.” Animals are very sensitive to electric current. Even a small current is fatal for many of them. Horses die even from a relatively weak voltage of 50-60 volts. And there are animals that not only have high resistance to electric current, but also generate current in their body. These fish are electric eels, stingrays, and catfish. Real living powerhouses!

The source of the current is special electrical organs located in two pairs under the skin along the body - under the caudal fin and on the upper part of the tail and back. In appearance, such organs are an oblong body, consisting of a reddish-yellow gelatinous substance, divided into several thousand flat plates, cells, longitudinal and transverse partitions. Something like a battery. More than 200 nerve fibers approach the electrical organ from the spinal cord, branches from which go to the skin of the back and tail. Touching the back or tail of this fish produces a powerful discharge that can instantly kill small animals and stun large animals and humans. Moreover, current is transmitted better in water. Large animals stunned by eels often drown in the water.

Electric organs are a means not only for protection from enemies, but also for obtaining food. Electric eels hunt at night. Approaching the prey, it randomly discharges its “batteries”, and all living things - fish, frogs, crabs - are paralyzed. The action of the discharge is transmitted over a distance of 3-6 meters. All he can do is swallow the stunned prey. Having used up the supply of electrical energy, the fish rests for a long time and replenishes it, “charging” its “batteries”.

2.3. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES AS SOURCES OF ELECTRIC CURRENT

After studying the literature, I learned that electricity can be obtained from some fruits and vegetables. Electric current can be obtained from lemon, apples and, most interestingly, from ordinary potatoes - raw and boiled. Such unusual batteries can work for several days and even weeks, and the electricity they generate is 5-50 times cheaper than that obtained from traditional batteries and at least six times more economical than a kerosene lamp when used for lighting.

Indian scientists have decided to use fruits, vegetables and their waste to power simple household appliances. The batteries contain a paste made from processed bananas, orange peels and other vegetables or fruits, in which zinc and copper electrodes are placed. The new product is designed primarily for residents of rural areas, who can prepare their own fruit and vegetable ingredients to recharge unusual batteries.

    PRACTICAL PART

Sections of leaves and stems are always negatively charged relative to normal tissue. If you take a lemon or an apple and cut it, and then apply two electrodes to the peel, they will not detect a potential difference. If one electrode is applied to the peel and the other to the inside of the pulp, a potential difference will appear, and the galvanometer will note the appearance of current.

I decided to test it experimentally and prove that there is electricity in vegetables and fruits. For research, I chose the following fruits and vegetables: lemon, apple, banana, tangerine, potato. She noted the readings of the galvanometer and, indeed, received a current in each case.



As a result of the work done:

1. I studied and analyzed scientific and educational literature about sources of electric current.

2. I got acquainted with the progress of work on obtaining electric current from plants.

3. She proved that there is electricity in the fruits of various fruits and vegetables and obtained unusual current sources.

Of course, the electrical energy of plants and animals currently cannot replace full-fledged powerful energy sources. However, they should not be underestimated.

    CONCLUSION

To achieve the goal of my work, all the research tasks have been solved.

Analysis of scientific and educational literature led to the conclusion that there are a lot of objects around us that can serve as sources of electric current.

During the work, methods for producing electric current were considered. I learned a lot of interesting things about traditional power sources - various kinds of power plants.

With the help of experience, I have shown that it is possible to obtain electricity from some fruits; of course, this is a small current, but the very fact of its presence gives hope that in the future such sources can be used for their own purposes (to charge a mobile phone, etc.). Such batteries can be used by residents of rural areas of the country, who can themselves prepare fruit and vegetable ingredients to recharge bio-batteries. The used battery composition does not pollute the environment like galvanic (chemical) cells and does not require separate disposal in designated areas.

LIST OF REFERENCES

    Gordeev A.M., Sheshnev V.B. Electricity in plant life. Publisher: Nauka - 1991

    Magazine "Science and Life", No. 10, 2004.

    Magazine. "Galileo" Science by experiment. No. 3/ 2011 “Lemon Battery”.

    Magazine “Young Erudite” No. 10 / 2009 “Energy from nothing.”

    Galvanic cell - article from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia.

    V. Lavrus “Batteries and accumulators.”

View document contents
"THESIS"

Topic: Living electricity

Scientific supervisor: Lilya Lenurovna Ablyalimova, teacher of biology and chemistry, Veselovskaya Secondary School

Relevance of the chosen topic: currently in Russia there is a trend of rising prices for energy resources, including electricity. Therefore, the issue of finding cheap energy sources is important. Humanity is faced with the task of developing environmentally friendly, renewable, non-traditional energy sources.

Purpose of the work: identifying ways to obtain electricity from plants and experimental confirmation of some of them.

    Study and analyze scientific and educational literature about sources of electric current.

    Familiarize yourself with the progress of work on obtaining electric current from plants.

    Prove that plants have electricity.

    Formulate directions for the beneficial use of the results obtained.

Research methods: literature analysis, experimental method, comparison method.

View presentation content
"PRESENTATION"


Live electricity Work completed: Asanova Evelina, 5th grade student MBOU "Veselovskaya Secondary School"


Relevance of the work:

Currently, there is a tendency in Russia to increase prices for energy resources, including electricity. Therefore, the issue of finding cheap energy sources is important.

Humanity is faced with the task of developing environmentally friendly, renewable, non-traditional energy sources.


Goal of the work:

Identification of ways to obtain electricity from plants and experimental confirmation of some of them.


  • Study and analyze scientific and educational literature about sources of electric current.
  • Familiarize yourself with the progress of work on obtaining electric current from plants.
  • Prove that plants have electricity.
  • Formulate directions for the beneficial use of the results obtained.

  • Literature analysis
  • Experimental method
  • Comparison method

Introduction

Our work is devoted to unusual energy sources.

Chemical current sources play a very important role in the world around us. They are used in mobile phones and spaceships, in cruise missiles and laptops, in cars, flashlights and ordinary toys. Every day we come across batteries, accumulators, and fuel cells.

Modern life is simply unthinkable without electricity - just imagine the existence of humanity without modern household appliances, audio and video equipment, an evening with a candle and a torch.


Living power plants

The most powerful discharges are produced by the South American electric eel. They reach 500-600 volts. This kind of tension can knock a horse off its feet. The eel creates a particularly strong electric current when it bends in an arc so that the victim is between its tail and head: a closed electrical ring is created .


Living power plants

Stingrays are living powerhouses, producing a voltage of about 50-60 volts and delivering a discharge current of 10 amperes.

All fish that produce electrical discharges use special electrical organs for this.


Something about electric fish

Pisces use discharges:

  • to illuminate your path;
  • to protect, attack and stun the victim;
  • transmit signals to each other and detect obstacles in advance.

Non-traditional current sources

In addition to traditional current sources, there are many non-traditional ones. It turns out that electricity can be obtained from almost anything.


Experiment:

Electricity can be obtained from some fruits and vegetables. Electric current can be obtained from lemon, apples and, most interestingly, from ordinary potatoes. I conducted experiments with these fruits and actually received a current.





  • As a result of the work done:
  • 1. I studied and analyzed scientific and educational literature about sources of electric current.
  • 2. I got acquainted with the progress of work on obtaining electric current from plants.
  • 3. She proved that there is electricity in the fruits of various fruits and vegetables and obtained unusual current sources.

CONCLUSION:

To achieve the goal of my work, all the research tasks have been solved. Analysis of scientific and educational literature led to the conclusion that there are a lot of objects around us that can serve as sources of electric current.

During the work, methods for producing electric current were considered. I learned a lot of interesting things about traditional power sources - various kinds of power plants.

Through experiments, I have shown that it is possible to obtain electricity from some fruits; of course, this is a small current, but the very fact of its presence gives hope that in the future such sources can be used for their own purposes (to charge a mobile phone, etc.). Such batteries can be used by residents of rural areas of the country, who can themselves prepare fruit and vegetable ingredients to recharge bio-batteries. The used battery composition does not pollute the environment like galvanic (chemical) cells and does not require separate disposal in designated areas.


Did you know that some plants use electricity, and some types of fish navigate in space and stun prey using electric organs?

: The publication “Nature” discussed how electrical impulses are transmitted in plants. Prominent examples that immediately come to mind are the Venus flytrap and mimosa pudica, in which the movement of leaves is caused by electricity. But there are other examples.

“The mammalian nervous system transmits electrical signals at speeds of up to 100 meters per second. Plants live at a slower pace. And although they do not have a nervous system, some plants, such as mimosa pudica ( Mimosa pudica) and venereus flytrap ( Dionaea muscipula), use electrical signals to provoke rapid movement of leaves. Signal transmission in these plants reaches a speed of 3 cm per second - and this speed is comparable to the speed of nerve impulses in muscles. On page 422 of this issue, author Mousavi and his colleagues explore the interesting and not entirely understood question of how plants generate and transmit electrical signals. The authors identify two proteins similar to glutamate receptors, which are critical components of the process of induction of an electrical wave provoked by leaf wounding. It spreads to neighboring organs, causing them to increase defensive responses in response to potential herbivore attack.”

Who would have thought that cutting a leaf could trigger an electrical signal? Experiments on the Tal's rhizomet plant showed no reaction when exposed to a leaf, but when the leaf was eaten, an electrical signal occurred, propagating at a speed of 9 cm per minute.

“Electrical signal transmission was most effective in leaves located directly above or below the wounded leaf,” the paper notes. “These leaves are connected to each other by the vascular bed of the plant, through which water and organic components are transmitted, and signals are also excellently transmitted over long distances.”. The resulting signal turns on protective components in the gene. “These incredible observations clearly demonstrate that electrical signal generation and transmission plays a critical role in initiating defense responses in distant targets when attacked by herbivores.”

The authors of the original paper did not address the topic of evolution, other than to suggest that "the deeply conserved function of these genes, Maybe, is a link between the perception of damage and peripheral protective reactions." If it is true that this function must have "existed before the divergence in the development of animals and plants."

Electric fish : Two new species of electric fish have been found in the Amazon, but they are equipped with electricity in different ways. One of them, like most other electric fish, is biphasic (or is a source of alternating current), and the other is monophasic (is a source of direct current). One Science Daily article looked at the evolutionary reasons why it works this way, and what's interesting is that "these delicate fish produce impulses of just a few hundred millivolts through an organ that protrudes slightly from the fibrous tail." This impulse is too weak to kill the victim, as the famous electric eel does, but these impulses are read by representatives of other species, and are used by members of the opposite sex for communication. Fish use them for "Electrolocation" in a complex aquatic environment at night". As far as their evolution is concerned, the two fish are so similar that they are classified as the same species, the only difference being the difference in the electrical phase of their signals.

There are a huge number of ways to receive information about the world around us: touch, sight, sound, smell, and now electricity. The living world is a miracle of communication between individual organisms and their environment. Each sense organ is delicately designed and brings great benefits to the body. Sophisticated systems are not the result of blind, uncontrolled processes. We believe that viewing them as systems built by intelligent design will speed up the process of research, seek insights into higher design, and imitate them to improve the field of engineering. And the real obstacle to the advancement of science is the assumption: “Oh, this organism evolved just because it evolved.” This is a soporific approach that has a hypnotic effect.

"Electricity in living organisms"


What is it, who discovered it, what is electricity?

Thales of Miletus was the first to draw attention to the electric charge. He conducted an experiment, rubbed amber with wool, after such simple movements, amber began to have the property of attracting small objects. This property is less like electric charges and more like magnetism. But in 1600, Gilbert established a distinction between these two phenomena.

In 1747 - 53 B. Franklin expounded the first consistent theory of electrical phenomena, finally established the electrical nature of lightning and invented the lightning rod.

In the second half of the 18th century, the quantitative study of electrical and magnetic phenomena began. The first measuring instruments appeared - electroscopes of various designs, electrometers. G. Cavendish (1773) and C. Coulomb (1785) experimentally established the law of interaction of stationary point electric charges (Cavendish’s works were published only in 1879). This basic law of electrostatics (Coulomb's law) for the first time made it possible to create a method for measuring electric charges based on the forces of interaction between them.

The next stage in the development of the science of E. is associated with the discovery at the end of the 18th century. L. Galvani "animal electricity"

The main scientist in the study of electricity and electric charges is Michael Faraday. With the help of experiments, he proved that the effects of electric charges and currents do not depend on the method of their production. Also in 1831, Faraday discovered electromagnetic induction - the excitation of an electric current in a circuit located in an alternating magnetic field. In 1833 - 34 Faraday established the laws of electrolysis; These works marked the beginning of electrochemistry.

So, what is electricity? Electricity is a set of phenomena caused by the existence, movement and interaction of electrically charged bodies or particles. The phenomenon of electricity can be found almost everywhere.

For example, if you rub a plastic comb hard against your hair, pieces of paper will begin to stick to it. And if you rub a balloon on your sleeve, it will stick to the wall. When amber, plastic and a number of other materials are rubbed, an electrical charge arises in them. The word “electric” itself comes from the Latin word electrum, meaning “amber”.

Where does electricity come from?

All objects around us contain millions of electrical charges, consisting of particles located inside atoms - the basis of all matter. The nucleus of most atoms contains two types of particles: neutrons and protons. Neutrons have no electrical charge, while protons carry a positive charge. Another particle rotating around the nucleus is electrons, which have a negative charge. Typically, each atom has the same number of protons and electrons, whose equal but opposite charges cancel each other out. As a result, we do not feel any charge, and the substance is considered uncharged. However, if we somehow disturb this balance, then this object will have an overall positive or negative charge, depending on which particles remain in it more - protons or electrons.

Electric charges influence each other. Positive and negative charges attract each other, and two negative or two positive charges repel each other. If you bring a negatively charged fishing line to an object, the negative charges of the object will move to its other end, and the positive charges, on the contrary, will move closer to the fishing line. The positive and negative charges of the fishing line and the object will attract each other, and the object will stick to the fishing line. This process is called electrostatic induction, and the object is said to fall into the electrostatic field of the fishing line.

What is it, who discovered it, what are living organisms

Living organisms are the main subject of study in biology. Living organisms not only fit into the existing world, but also isolated themselves from it using special barriers. The environment in which living organisms were formed is a space-time continuum of events, that is, a set of phenomena of the physical world, which is determined by the characteristics and position of the Earth and the Sun.

For convenience of consideration, all organisms are divided into different groups and categories, which constitutes a biological system of their classification. Their most general division is into nuclear and non-nuclear. Based on the number of cells that make up the body, they are divided into unicellular and multicellular. Colonies of unicellular organisms occupy a special place between them.

For all living organisms, i.e. Plants and animals are affected by abiotic environmental factors (factors of non-living nature), especially temperature, light and humidity. Depending on the influence of factors of inanimate nature, plants and animals are divided into different groups and they develop adaptations to the influence of these abiotic factors.

As already mentioned, living organisms are distributed over a large number. Today we will look at living organisms, dividing them into warm-blooded and cold-blooded:

with a constant body temperature (warm-blooded);

with unstable body temperature (cold-blooded).

Organisms with unstable body temperature (fish, amphibians, reptiles). Organisms with a constant body temperature (birds, mammals).

What is the connection between physics and living organisms?

Understanding the essence of life, its origin and evolution determines the entire future of humanity on Earth as a living species. Of course, a huge amount of material has now been accumulated, it is being carefully studied, especially in the field of molecular biology and genetics, there are schemes or models of development, there is even practical human cloning.

Moreover, biology reports many interesting and important details about living organisms, while missing something fundamental. The word “physics” itself, according to Aristotle, means “physis” - nature. Indeed, all the matter of the Universe, and therefore we ourselves, consists of atoms and molecules, for which quantitative and generally correct laws of their behavior have already been obtained, including at the quantum-molecular level.

Moreover, physics has been and remains an important factor in the overall development of the study of living organisms in general. In this sense, physics as a cultural phenomenon, and not just as a field of knowledge, creates the sociocultural understanding closest to biology. Probably, it is in physical cognition that styles of thinking are reflected. The logical and methodological aspects of cognition and natural science itself, as is known, are almost entirely based on the experience of physical Sci.

Therefore, the task of scientific knowledge of living things may be to substantiate the possibility of using physical models and ideas to determine the development of nature and society, also on the basis of physical laws and scientific analysis of the knowledge obtained about the mechanism of processes in a living organism. As M.V. Volkenshtein said 25 years ago, “in biology as the science of living things, only two ways are possible: either to recognize the impossible explanation of life on the basis of physics and chemistry, or such an explanation is possible and must be found, including on the basis of general laws, characterizing the structure and nature of matter, substance and field.”

Electricity in various classes of living organisms

At the end of the 18th century, the famous scientists Galvani and Volta discovered electricity in animals. The first animals on which scientists experimented to confirm their discovery were frogs. The cell is affected by various environmental factors - stimuli: physical - mechanical, temperature, electrical;

Electrical activity turned out to be an integral property of living matter. Electricity generates the nerve, muscle and glandular cells of all living creatures, but this ability is most developed in fish. Let us consider the phenomenon of electricity in warm-blooded living organisms.

It is currently known that out of 20 thousand modern fish species, about 300 are capable of creating and using bioelectric fields. Based on the nature of the discharges generated, such fish are divided into strongly electric and weakly electric. The former include freshwater South American electric eels, African electric catfish and marine electric rays. These fish generate very powerful discharges: eels, for example, with a voltage of up to 600 volts, catfish - 350. The current voltage of large sea rays is low, since sea water is a good conductor, but the current strength of their discharges, for example, the Torpedo ray, sometimes reaches 60 amperes.

Fish of the second type, for example, Mormyrus and other representatives of the order Beaked Snouts, do not emit separate discharges. They send a series of almost continuous and rhythmic signals (pulses) of high frequency into the water, this field manifests itself in the form of so-called lines of force. If an object that differs in its electrical conductivity from water enters an electric field, the configuration of the field changes: objects with higher conductivity concentrate the power lilies around them, and those with lower conductivity disperse them. Fish perceive these changes with the help of electrical receptors, located in most fish in the head area, and determine the location of the object. Thus, these fish perform true electrical location.

Almost all of them hunt mainly at night. Some of them have poor eyesight, which is why, in the process of long evolution, these fish have developed such a perfect method for detecting food, enemies, and various objects at a distance.

The techniques used by electric fish when catching prey and defending against enemies suggest technical solutions to humans when developing installations for electrofishing and repelling fish. Modeling of electrical fish location systems opens up exceptional prospects. In modern underwater location technology, there are no search and detection systems that would work in the same way as electrolocators created in nature’s workshop. Scientists in many countries are working hard to create such equipment.

AMPHIBIDES

To study the flow of electricity in amphibians, let's take Galvani's experiment. In his experiments, he used the hind legs of a frog connected to the spine. Hanging these preparations on a copper hook to the iron railing of the balcony, he noticed that when the limbs of the frog swayed in the wind, their muscles contracted with each touch to the railing. Based on this, Galvani came to the conclusion that the twitching of the legs was caused by “animal electricity” originating in the frog’s spinal cord and transmitted through metal conductors (the hook and the balcony railings) to the muscles of the limbs. Physicist Alexander Volta spoke out against this position of Galvani about “animal electricity”. In 1792, Volta repeated Galvani’s experiments and established that these phenomena cannot be considered “animal electricity.” In Galvani's experiment, the current source was not the frog's spinal cord, but a circuit formed from dissimilar metals - copper and iron. Volta was right. Galvani's first experiment did not prove the presence of "animal electricity", but these studies attracted the attention of scientists to the study of electrical phenomena in living organisms. In response to Volta's objection, Galvani performed a second experiment, this time without the participation of metals. He threw the end of the sciatic nerve with a glass hook onto the muscle of the frog's limb - and at the same time, contraction of the muscle was also observed. Ionic conduction also occurs in a living organism.

The formation and separation of ions in living matter is facilitated by the presence of water in the protein system. The dielectric constant of the protein system depends on it.

The charge carriers in this case are hydrogen ions - protons. Only in a living organism are all types of conductivity realized simultaneously.

The relationship between different conductivities changes depending on the amount of water in the protein system. Today people do not yet know all the properties of the complex electrical conductivity of living matter. But what is clear is that it is on them that those fundamentally different properties that are inherent only to living things depend.

The cell is affected by various environmental factors - stimuli: physical - mechanical, temperature, electrical.

Slide 2

History of the discovery of electrical phenomena

Thales of Miletus was the first to draw attention to electric charge 600 years BC. He discovered that amber, rubbed with wool, will acquire the properties of attracting light objects: fluff, pieces of paper. Later it was believed that only amber had this property. In the middle of the 17th century, Otto von Garicke developed an electric friction machine. In addition, he discovered the property of electrical repulsion of unipolarly charged objects, and in 1729 the English scientist Stephen Gray discovered the division of bodies into conductors of electric current and insulators. Soon his colleague Robert Simmer, observing the electrification of his silk stockings, came to the conclusion that electrical phenomena are caused by the separation of bodies into positive and negative charges. When bodies rub against each other, they cause electrification of these bodies, that is, electrification is the accumulation of a charge of the same type on a body, and charges of the same sign repel, and charges of different signs attract each other and are compensated when connected, making the body neutral (uncharged). In 1729, Charles Dufay discovered that there are two types of charges. Experiments conducted by Du Fay said that one of the charges is formed by rubbing glass on silk, and the other by rubbing resin on wool. The concept of positive and negative charge was introduced by the German naturalist Georg Christoph. The first quantitative researcher was the law of interaction of charges, experimentally established in 1785 by Charles Coulomb using the sensitive torsion balance he developed.

Slide 3

Why do electrified people's hair rise up?

The hair is electrified with the same charge. As you know, like charges repel each other, so hair, like the leaves of a paper plume, diverges in all directions. If any conducting body, including a human body, is isolated from the ground, then it can be charged to a high potential. Thus, with the help of an electrostatic machine, the human body can be charged to a potential of tens of thousands of volts.

Slide 4

Does an electric charge placed on the human body in this case have an effect on the nervous system?

The human body is a conductor of electricity. If it is isolated from the ground and charged, then the charge is located exclusively on the surface of the body, so charging to a relatively high potential does not affect the nervous system, since the nerve fibers are located under the skin. The influence of an electric charge on the nervous system is felt at the moment of discharge, during which a redistribution of charges occurs on the body. This redistribution is a short-term electric current passing not along the surface, but inside the body.

Slide 5

Why do birds land on high-voltage transmission wires with impunity?

The body of a bird sitting on a wire is a branch of a circuit connected parallel to the section of the conductor between the bird’s legs. When two sections of a circuit are connected in parallel, the magnitude of the currents in them is inversely proportional to the resistance. The resistance of a bird's body is huge compared to the resistance of a short length of conductor, so the amount of current in the bird's body is negligible and harmless. It should also be added that the potential difference in the area between the bird’s legs is small.

Slide 6

Fish and electricity.

Pisces use discharges: to illuminate their path; to protect, attack and stun the victim; - transmit signals to each other and detect obstacles in advance

Slide 7

The most famous electric fish are the electric eel, electric stingray and electric catfish. These fish have special organs for storing electrical energy. Small tensions arising in ordinary muscle fibers are summed up here due to the sequential inclusion of many individual elements, which are connected by nerves, like conductors, into long batteries.

Slide 8

Stingrays.

“This fish freezes the animals it wants to catch, overpowering them with the force of the blow that lives in its body.” Aristotle

Slide 9

Som.

Electrical organs are located almost along the entire length of the fish’s body and produce discharges with voltages of up to 360 V.

Slide 10

ELECTRIC EEL

The most powerful electrical organs are found in eels that live in the rivers of tropical America. Their discharges reach a voltage of 650 V.

Slide 11

Thunder is one of the most dangerous phenomena.

Thunder and lightning are one of the menacing but majestic phenomena with which man has been prepared since ancient times. A raging element. It fell upon him in the form of blinding giant lightning, menacing thunderclaps, downpour and hail. In fear of the thunderstorm, people deified it, considering it an instrument of the gods.

Slide 12

Lightning

Most often we observe lightning that resembles a winding river with tributaries. Such lightning is called linear; when discharged between clouds, their length reaches more than 20 km. Lightning of other types can be seen much less frequently. An electrical discharge in the atmosphere in the form of linear lightning is an electric current. Moreover, the current strength changes in 0.2 - 0.3 seconds. Approximately 65% ​​of all lightning. Which we observe have a current value of 10,000 A, but rarely reach 230,000 A. The lightning channel through which the current flows becomes very hot and shines brightly. The temperature of the channel reaches tens of thousands of degrees, the pressure rises, the air expands, and it’s like an explosion of hot gases. We perceive this as thunder. A lightning strike to a ground object can cause a fire.

Slide 13

When lightning strikes, for example, a tree. It heats up, the moisture evaporates from it, and the pressure of the resulting steam and heated gases lead to destruction. To protect buildings from lightning discharges, lightning rods are used, which are a metal rod that rises above the protected object.

Slide 14

Lightning.

In deciduous trees, the current passes inside the trunk through the core, where there is a lot of sap, which boils under the influence of the current and the vapors tear the tree apart.

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