A scientist has allegedly designed a
stunning new kind of batteries
that can unbelievably power
smartphones for several years at a
time. Vladislav Kiselev is a Ukrainian
scientist who has made a stunning
new claim.
The man claims that he has
developed a type of battery that
can power gadgets like smartphones and even cars for up
to 12 years, without having to be
recharged. According to Oddity Central,
Kiselev, a senior researcher at the
Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry
and Petrochemistry in Kiev, and
professor at Ukraine’s National
Academy of Sciences, unveiled his intriguing battery prototype
during the 2016 edition of
Sikorsky Challenge, a prestigious
international competition for
research projects. The matchbox-like device looks
fairly unimpressive, but the
Ukrainian scientist claims that it
has been continuously powering
electrical devices for a year and
four months without a single recharge, and will continue to do
so for the next 11 years. That’s
because his “battery” produces
energy instead of simply storing it. But with virtually all the world’s
battery manufacturers and
researchers struggling to come up
with a real breakthrough in
battery technology, how did
Kiselev create one that he claims lasts for 12 years?
The senior researcher says he was able
to do it by taking advantage of a key
property of tritium – the ability to emit
electrons. He adds that American
company City Labs also makes use of
the radioactive isotope of hydrogen, but whereas they use tritium-covered solar
cells, he opted for an enhanced
electrochemical cells, which makes the
battery 1,000 times more powerful. So whereas City Labs NanoTritium™
batteries provide low power to devices
like medical implants and various
sensors, Kiselev’s version can be used to
power large electronic devices and even
cars. The scientist adds that electrochemical
cells similar to the one he uses in his
battery have been used in Ukraine since
the 1930s, but no one has ever been
able to use them for energy generation.
He and his team were able to improve the design in order to achieve this. Interestingly enough, Kiselev says that
after failing to secure research grants
for the project, he and his colleagues
funded themselves. Now, after
presenting the results of their labor at
Sikorsky Challenge, Kiselev says that he is in talks with both Turkish and Chinese
businessmen to produce a version of his
tritium battery that can be used in
mobile phones. Regarding the radioactive properties of
tritium, Vladislav Kiselev emphasized
the fact that some radioactive
substances are not hazardous to
humans, and tritium is one of them. It is
actually used as a radioluminescent light source in wristwatches. Kiselev believes that tritium is the future
of energy, and claims that the fact that
11 of the world’s most advanced
countries are planning to build an
international fusion reactor – also based
on tritium – to produce energy is proof of that. However, he adds that while
such reactors cost tens of billions of
dollars to build, his tritium batteries are
an affordable way to produce energy for up to 12 years.
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