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New Long Life Battery
Using some of the same manufacturing techniques
that produce microchips, researchers have created
a porous-silicon diode that may lead to improved
betavoltaics. Such devices convert low levels
of radiation into electricity and can have useful
lives spanning several decades.
The batterys staying power is tied to its
fuel, tritium, a hydrogen isotope that releases
electrons in a process called beta decay. The
porous-silicon semiconductors generate electricity
by absorbing the electrons, just as a solar cell
generates electricity by absorbing energy from
incoming photons of light.
While producing as little as one-thousandth of
the power of conventional chemical batteries,
the new BetaBattery concept is more
efficient and potentially less expensive than
similar designs and should be easier to manufacture.
If the new diode proves successful when incorporated
into a finished battery, it could help power such
hard-to-service, long-life systems as structural
sensors on bridges, climate monitoring equipment
and satellites.
For more information, visit www.nsf.gov.
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