Source - http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/
By - MATTHEW L. WALD
Category - Trip To Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
By - MATTHEW L. WALD
Category - Trip To Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
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| Trip To Miami |
Smartphones, tablets and other portable
devices that need electricity rely on batteries that use a chemical
reaction. But Maxwell Technologies, a company in San Diego, announced
Tuesday that it was providing devices for television remote controls
that store electricity without chemicals.
The devices, called ultracapacitors, are a little smaller than the
two AAA batteries they will replace. They can recharge within minutes
and have a life span that will probably outlast the remote control, said
Michael W. Sund, a spokesman for the company.
Maxwell said it was approached by Celadon, a company that makes
remote controls for set-top boxes, with a request for a power system
that could work with a remote control.
Ultracapacitors are used in many devices, particularly in
manufacturing, but they have only pushed out bursts of energy, and basic
storage has remained in the chemical battery. The ultracapacitors store
energy by putting an electric charge — positive or negative, on plates
that are separated by an insulator.
Engineers have experimented with the use of capacitors in hybrid and electric cars,
where they could provide energy for quick acceleration and recapture
the energy generated when a car slows down. Maxwell already sells giant
capacitors for use in hybrid transit buses that need to capture energy
when they come to a stop. The capacitors in the buses also deliver
energy to help get the wheels moving.
But using capacitors to provide a steady flow of energy is something
new. Still, like other capacitors, the new ones can be recharged
quickly. The remote control can recharge in five minutes and run for
many hours, maybe even days, depending on how often it is used to change
channels, Mr. Sund said. And unlike the lithium-ion batteries used in
phones, laptops and, now cars, capacitors do not lose storage space with
age.
“The speed of charge is an advantage,” Mr. Sund said. “If you forget to plug it in, it’s just a few minutes.”
The Energy Department’s Advanced Research Project Administration – Energy, an energy version of the better-known Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, is enthusiastic about capacitors, and is financing several projects that use it.
Comparing a capacitors’ energy storage characteristics to those of a
chemical battery is a bit like comparing the water storage capability of
a pitcher with that of a roll of paper towels. A paper towel, like a
chemical battery, takes a little time to soak up the water and never
quite gives it all back — and over time, its ability to store water
breaks down. The pitcher can be repeatedly filled quickly and emptied
quickly or slowly.
So far, no one can build a capacitor that meets the requirements of a
smartphone, Mr. Sund said. But his company is working on one that would
be an adjunct to a smartphone battery, providing energy for the camera
flash, a weak spot in current smartphones.
And more capable capacitors are on the way. Maxwell uses a layer of
carbon on an aluminum substrate, where the charged particles can be
stored. But researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles, are working on a model that uses a single layer of carbon atoms.

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