Krynn72
The Freeman
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- May 16, 2004
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What if you could charge your phone, tablet, or laptop in 30 seconds and have it work all day long? That’s the promise presented in a short film titled The Super Supercapacitor that profiles the work of UCLA inorganic chemistry professor Ric Kaner, whose research focused on conductive polymers and next generation materials.
The story goes that while developing a new way to generate graphene — the same material used in carbon nanotubes — Kaner’s team made a serendipitous discovery: the new carbon-based material acted as a supercapacitor.
As explained in the short, batteries have high energy storage but slow charging/discharging whereas a capacitor has low energy storage but fast charging/discharging. But what we ideally want for our rechargeable electronic devices is high energy storage and fast charging/discharging, or in other words, the best of both worlds. That is what a supercapacitor delivers, and a carbon-based supercapacitor could replace batteries that contain toxic materials that must be properly disposed of.
Sounds pretty awesome.