The Battery Of The Future May Be Made Of Paper!
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Creating batteries that are smaller, cheaper, rechargeable and most importantly, environmentally friendly has been the holy grail for engineers across the globe for many years. Now some researchers at Sweden's Linköping University may have finally succeeded in cracking the code with a battery made of paper!
Power Paper is the brainchild of scientists from Linköping University's Laboratory of Organic Electronics. The researchers begin by blasting cellulose, the material that is used to make most paper and cardboard, with high-pressure water until each cellulose strand measures a mere 20 nanometers in diameter. The submerged strands are then exposed to a solution of electrically charged polymer which forms a thin coating around each nanofiber. The coated fibers and the liquid in between that works as an electrolyte, is then fashioned into a thin sheet, resulting in what the researchers call 'Power Paper'.
According to the researchers, one sheet of Power Paper can store up to 1 Faraday, or as much a super capacitor. The only difference? Unlike the bulky capacitor this one measures a mere 15 centimeter (6 inches) wide and a few tenths of a millimeter thick. What's even better is that Power Paper can be recharged hundreds of times, and each charge takes just a few seconds. The lightweight battery that is also waterproof does not require harmful chemicals or heavy metals to manufacture and is extremely environmentally friendly. It should therefore come as no surprise that it has already set four world records!
The researchers who revealed Power Paper, in the online journal Advanced Science on February 2, are now trying to scale the manufacturing process, so that this flexible and sustainable battery can be readily available to power all our devices.
Resources: phys.org, scienceexplorer.com, fe.itn.liu.se.org
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1141 Comments
- hair no orangealmost 9 yearsi dont no what to say
- zacaalmost 9 yearsi need that
- scarliealmost 9 yearsscarlettisamazing
- ????almost 9 yearswow just wow
- Salome and Avaalmost 9 yearsthat is actually very bad since it can cut many trees... and we need trees to live! so why do we need to do this if we already have good batteries?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?
- therandomnerd57almost 9 yearsPEOPLES! Good batteries? THEY'RE BAD BATTERIES. They use bad chemicals like it said in the article, and how they produce the common battery now is worse than cutting down trees, and it said the same material as paper. NOT PAPER.
- chickenthoalmost 9 yearsSpeaking of the future, I think they might invent flying cars, flying hover-boards, maybe even flying shoes!
- rainbows12almost 9 yearsI'd also like to point out that telaportation is not possible.
- therandomnerd57almost 9 yearsTechnically wormholes (not an actual worm hole, a bend in space time) are teleportation. Just say'n.
- R55yalmost 9 yearswow
- i am a personalmost 9 yearswow
- i am a personalmost 9 yearsthe future is a head of us
- dab master 1798almost 9 yearsI don't like it because they are so small you will lose them
- therandomnerd57almost 9 yearsDude! I'm guessing that they will put them in containers, to stop them from being damaged, and it looks like it has a larger surface area than the common batteries used today in homes, so it would actually would be harder to lose than a common AA or AAA battery.