Xue et al. / American Chemical Society
To do it, researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology removed the barrier that normally separates the two electrodes in a lithium-ion battery and replaced it with a nanotube film with piezoelectric properties.
Piezoelectric devices typically convert movement into electricity such as this electricity-generating backpack. In a totally separate second step, that electricity can then be converted into chemical energy, which is what happens when you charge a battery.
By placing the material between the battery electrodes, the mechanical energy is converted directly to chemical energy, completely bypassing the need to generate electricity at all.
“The device basically acts as a hybrid generator-battery unit, or in other words, a self-charging power cell,” Phys.org explains.
The hybrid battery was described in a recent issue of the journal Nano Letters.
To prove the concept, the team stuck one of their coin-size batteries on the bottom of a shoe. They found that walking could generate enough energy to charge the battery.
Next up for the team is scaling up the technology so that it can charge batteries with high a enough voltages to be useful for portable gadgets.
Source:The Verge, Phys.org
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