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TA1LGUNN3R wrote:I remember reading that a while back... iirc they said that it would be possible to make it so that your devices could be quick-charged fully in just about no time at all (seconds-minutes) and still have regular use time. That would be great. Also that it would cut down on precious metals dependence. Fascinating stuff.
-TG
AndyDufresne wrote:Imagine, an entire generation that will have never licked a battery. The world is charging.
--Andy
jonesthecurl wrote:Are you positive?
rdsrds2120 wrote:jonesthecurl wrote:Are you positive?
Watt are you implying, that I'd waste my time?
BMO
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:I can ohmly guess we're bored.
-TG
AndyDufresne wrote:Imagine, an entire generation that will have never licked a battery. The world is changing.
AndyDufresne wrote:AndyDufresne wrote:Imagine, an entire generation that will have never licked a battery. The world is changing.
Imagine, an entire generation that will only ever associate "battery" with "assault" (e.g. Rdsrds2120 has been charged with Assault & Battery.)
--Andy
nietzsche wrote:I hope they are ready before I turn 40. Take them from the scientist and give them to an entrepreneur now please.
In the comments of this video the PI states that they've achieved energy densities of 1.36mWh/cm3. Since standard energy densities are given in MJ/kg we'll have to guess the mass density 2g/cm3 will be conservative since it is the density of graphite which is very near the highest possible packing density of graphene.
This gives us an energy density of .00245 MJ/kg.* Which is 60 times greater than a traditional capacitor (.000 036MJ/kg) but 1/300 the density of a rechargeable lithium ion battery.
We can conclude from this that the research is very promising and could have a huge impact in areas where we already rely on large capacitors. But the technology is not any where near replacing current battery technology.
* Side work: 1.36mWh/cm3 * .5 cm3 /g * 3600 s/h = 2448 Ws/kg = 2.45 kJ/kg
Note: 2g/cm3 is the most conservative mass density estimate but every where I checked only gave the density in terms of cm3. I would not be surprised if their actual prototype had a density closer to 1g/cm3 but I doubt it would be much less than that.
This is exactly right. Energy density has been improved, but it's still far from enough. Currently your electric car would have about a 10 mile range before having to fill up again.
If you wanted to power a cell phone off of this technology in it's current state you would need a battery roughly 300 times the weight of current cell phone batteries. So to get 5hrs of talk time you would need a super capacitor of this design weighing 1.2kg (3 pounds) instead of 3.9g. Alternatively a supercapacitor weighing 3.9g would give you 12 seconds of talk time. As I mentioned before my estimates were conservative so you could be getting as much as 24 seconds of talk time.
They have yet to beat the battery, but that does not diminish how important this research is.
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