Showing posts with label carbon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label carbon. Show all posts

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Carbon network allows a battery to recharge 120 times faster

 http://i.imgur.com/RcQlG.jpg

From South Korea comes this new technology , which allows the batteries to recharge at incredible speeds ranging from 30 to 120 times faster than normal.
How is this possible? Thanks to the carbon bearing networks batteries as indicated in the title. How does this work? To explain it is better to make an analogy.
Imagine you have a bucket of ice, but empty. You need to fill it with water, but do not want to spill the water, so you have to fill the gaps carefully one by one, so you can take forever. Now imagine that you use the tap has several sugarcane output for water, and each is for a hole in the bucket: this way, you'll fill the bucket faster. For this new system of charging for the battery works the same way.
Thanks to carbon networks, magazines are powered battery all at once, thus allowing recharge time are severely diminished. A battery that took 6 hours to recharge it would recharge in only 3 minutes. Now that's speed, is not it?
Now I just need to wait for this to become commercial.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Panasonic develops artificial system of photosynthesis to reduce pollution

 CO2

Japan's Panasonic claims to have developed a system that, with sunlight transforms CO2 into fuel.

CO2, aka carbon dioxide is a pollutant and a major contributor to the greenhouse effect.

According to the company, your system has 0.2% efficiency under laboratory conditions. According to Panasonic, the index is similar to real plants and more than any previous experiments conducted in the area.

The company also says that the system uses a nitride semiconductor to excite the electrons of CO2 until they turn into formic acid, used in dyes and perfumes.

The invention is already patented, but there are no predictions of release. However, Panasonic says it intends to deploy the technology in incinerators and factories, responsible for high emissions of CO2.