The Inquirer-Home

Scientists invent wonder batteries

It's your Kelvins Marty
Wed Mar 10 2010, 13:59

A BUNCH of scientists at MIT are revolutionising the battery as we know it.

nanotubesThe MIT scientists published some results at the weekend in which they showed that what they called thermopower waves could be used to produce electricity when pushed through carbon nanotubes. If you are picturing the Doc from the Back to the Future films you are not alone.

The scientists described thermopower as a newly discovered phenomenon, adding that they used a chicken-wire-like lattice of carbon atoms to create submicroscopic tubes through which a thermal wave is forced to produce energy. In a statement they said, "Like a collection of flotsam propelled along the surface by waves traveling across the ocean, it turns out that a thermal wave - a moving pulse of heat - traveling along a microscopic wire can drive electrons along, creating an electrical current".

To prove this they coated a layer of reactive fuel, that can produce heat by decomposing, onto the tubes and set it alight. They found that as they burnt, so they produced energy.

"These tubes, just a few billionths of a meter (nanometers) in diameter, are part of a family of novel carbon molecules, including buckyballs and graphene sheets, that have been the subject of intensive worldwide research over the last two decades."

Studies have shown that the system can put out energy up to 100 times greater than a lithium-ion battery that weighs the same, plus, the MIT researchers said, they could be made in large arrays to supply significant amounts of power for larger devices. µ

 

Share this:

Comments
Hey David...

Generators don't create energy either... They transform it, like chemical energy into eletric/cinetic/'whateveric' energy. Nuclear energy don't creaty energy either... it simply releases the nuclei energy.

Now if you want to get closer to 'create' energy, you can try a matter/anti-matter mix, but in the end it's another transformation... It's turnning matter into energy.

You can't make energy out of nowhere.

posted by : Erick Mentos, 11 March 2010 Complain about this comment
to mike

That's why it's referred to as a battery, not a generator. It is a storage medium for energy and it can 'supply' power to a device. There is no implication that this violates the law of the conservation of energy

posted by : David, 11 March 2010 Complain about this comment
The device 'transformed' energy, it did not 'create' it

Re: The last pragraph of the article - energy can be neither created nor destroyed, unles you're talking about atomic power (and some debate that...).

posted by : mike, 10 March 2010 Complain about this comment
Don't look for this anytime soon.

I'd say never. Like the Peltier effect, depends on having a "cold" side. Also, current version is a Rube Goldberg one-shot affair: dab a little fuel on end of nanotube and ignite it with a laser. I'd assume that destroys the nanotube.

posted by : bigger_luddite, 10 March 2010 Complain about this comment
aboutus
Advertisement
Subscribe to INQ newsletters
Advertisement
INQ Poll

The Pirate Bay poll

Will UK ISPs blocking of The Pirate Bay stop you from using it?