By Melissa Knowles: Gold is now being sold at one of
its highest rates in years. Wouldn't it be nice if you could figure out a
way to make your own gold? Two professors at Michigan State University
may have beaten you to it. They have discovered a way to use bacteria to
make 99.9% pure gold.
Kazem Kashefi, an assistant
professor of microbiology and molecular genetics, and Adam Brown, an
associate professor of electronic art and intermedia, created a compact
laboratory to conduct their experiment. Brown and Kashefi made the gold
by combining the bacterium, Cupriavidus metallidurans, and gold
chloride. Gold chloride has no real value and is a toxic chemical liquid
found in nature. Once it's added to the bacteria, the bacteria ingest
all of the liquid's toxins and waste. Then, over the course of a week,
the toxic substance becomes a solid 24-karat gold nugget. There's no
word yet on the actual value of the gold that's created in the lab. The
researchers believe the magic they created in their compact factory
happens in nature all the time without human interference.
Kashefi calls the process they
use to create the gold "microbial alchemy" and says that it is
"transforming gold from something that has no value into a solid,
precious metal that's valuable." The compact factory that the scientific
duo used to create the gold is more like an art installation, so much
so that they named it "The Great Work of the Metal Lover." The work received honorable mention at the cyber art convention, Prix Ars Electronica, and is on exhibit until October 7.
Unfortunately, do not expect
Brown and Kashefi's work to translate into golden nuggets for you. The
researchers have said their experiment is not cost-effective enough to
repeat on a large scale. Source
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