Thursday, October 8, 2009

Nuclear Batteries Solve The Shrinking Gadget Conundrum [Batteries]


It sucks that batteries are nearly bigger than the gadgets they're powering, but thanks to University of Missouri researchers and some tiny nuclear batteries, that'll one day be an issue of the past. Yeah, you read right. Tiny. Nuclear. Batteries.
The real secret behind the size of the batteries is the use of new liquid semiconductors instead of tired old solid semiconductors. That's great, because nuclear batteries aren't a new idea, nor are they terrifying and harmful according to Jae Kwon, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Missouri:
'People hear the word ‘nuclear' and think of something very dangerous,' he said. 'However, nuclear power sources have already been safely powering a variety of devices, such as pace-makers, space satellites and underwater systems.'
Anyway, researchers are building and testing these batteries as you read this, but the bad news is that the initial focus is on powering micro/nanoelectromechanical systems, not remote controls. We can't even begin to speculate as to when we would see tiny nuclear batteries in our local 7-Elevens.
[Gizmodo via University of Missouri via Boing Boing]

2 comments:

  1. I think Nuclear batteries will have alot more the prove if they would like to survive against the new technologies. Algae batteries, atomic batteries, and also sugar batteries have all started to show face, and many are also paper thin, with incredible life-spans.

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  2. The more the merrier - more technologies, hopefully better and better technologies, allow for a good competition. The competition drives the market and promotes newer techs along with it.

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