Mobile devices in the future may get extra battery power thanks to
nanotechnology.

Researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have
come up with a way of storing extra charge in 'ultracapacitors'.

The team led by Riccardo Signorelli, Joel Schindall and John Kassakian
have developed a new type of double layer capacitor that can store
charge way beyond the limits of normal capacitors. They say that their
new design is 1,000 times the power density of conventional batteries
and 10,000 times that of the much touted fuel cells.

Capacitors have been a way of storing charge for electrical devices
for many years. Typically, a capacitor consists of two plates. As a
current is applied to the circuit, a negative charge  will build up on
one plate and a positive charge on the other. The amount of charge
that can be held on a plate depends on its size. Over the years
engineers have come up with ways of folding the plate to increase its
surface area without necessarily increasing the space the device takes
up.

The MIT has increased the surface area of a plate by covering the
capacitor with 'carbon nanotubes' (CNTs) arranged in a vertical
matrix. The team claim to have grown CNTs with diameters of between
0.7 and 2nm and lengths up to tens of microns long. As a result, the
team say they have created a device which has packed 10 million such
tubes only a few nanometres long in each square millimetre of the
capacitor, dramatically increasing the surface area and its ability to
hold a charge.

The devices are robust too with the team claiming that a CNT based
capacity has a lifetime of 300,000 cycles.

It is estimated that commercial products containing capacitors based
on CNT technology are between three and five years away.

http://www.pcpro.co.uk/news/84646/batteries-to-get-boost-from-nanotechnology.html

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