New Nanowire Battery Can Be Recharged 100,000 Times — So it Never Needs to Be Replaced
Soon, you may never have to replace your batteries again.
New Nanowire Battery Can Be Recharged 100,000 Times — So it Never Needs to Be Replaced
Soon, you may never have to replace your batteries again.
Researchers
at the University of California, Irvine, have developed a
groundbreaking nanowire-based battery material that can be recharged
hundreds of thousands of times, bringing us closer to batteries that may
never need replacement.
This innovation
could dramatically extend the lifespan of batteries for various
devices, including computers, smartphones, appliances, electric
vehicles, and even spacecraft.
The
key to this breakthrough lies in the use of nanowires, which are
thousands of times thinner than human hair and highly conductive.
Although nanowires hold great potential for energy storage, they are
typically too fragile to withstand repeated charging cycles—until now.
The
UCI team, led by doctoral candidate Mya Le Thai, solved this fragility
problem by coating gold nanowires with a manganese dioxide shell and
encasing the structure in a Plexiglas-like gel. This combination proved
to be incredibly resilient, with Thai cycling the electrode 200,000
times without any loss of capacity or power. The gel layer seems to
provide flexibility, preventing the cracking and degradation that
usually limit the lifespan of nanowire-based batteries. This discovery
represents a major step toward commercializing long-lasting,
nanowire-based batteries, and it highlights the potential for future
energy storage solutions that could transform numerous industries. The
findings were published in the American Chemical Society's Energy
Letters
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