New aluminum battery for smartphones can be charged in a minute
LONDON
(Reuters) - U.S. scientists said they have invented a cheap,
long-lasting and flexible battery made of aluminum for use in
smartphones that can be charged in as little as one minute.
The researchers, who detailed their discovery in the
journal Nature, said the new aluminum-ion battery has the potential to
replace lithium-ion batteries, used in millions of laptops and mobile
phones.
Besides recharging much faster, the new aluminum battery
is safer than existing lithium-ion batteries, which occasionally burst
into flames, they added.
Researchers have long tried but failed to develop a
battery made of aluminum, a lightweight and relatively inexpensive metal
that has high charging capacity.
A team lead by chemistry professor Hongjie Dai at Stanford
University in California made a breakthrough by accidentally
discovering that graphite made a good partner to aluminum, Stanford said
in a statement.
In a prototype, aluminum was used to make the
negatively-charged anode while graphite provided material for the
positively charged cathode.
A prototype aluminum battery recharged in one minute, the scientists said.
"Lithium-ion batteries can be a fire hazard," said Dai.
"Our new battery won't catch fire, even if you drill through it."
The new battery is also very durable and flexible, the scientists said.
While lithium-ion batteries last about 1,000 cycles, the
new aluminum battery was able to continue after more than 7,500 cycles
without loss of capacity. It also can be bent or folded.
Larger aluminum batteries could also be used to store renewable energy on the electrical grid, Dai said.
(Reporting by Eric Onstad, editing by David Evans)
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