Teknologi untuk memanfaatkan tritium (gas hidrogin
radioaktif) yang sudah tidak terpakai lagi untuk jadi
baterai atau accu tahan lama sampai puluhan tahun,
atau keperluan praktis lainnya, sudah dikembangkan
oleh Rochester University serta sudah dipatenkan oleh
BetaBatt.

Salam,
RM

-------------------

Nuclear battery keeps going, and going ...
New devices could put out power for decade or more

University of Rochester / BetaBatt
A researcher shows off the wafer test fixture that was
used to test the new porous-silicon diode and its
interactions with tritium gas. The diode is the dark
wafer in the center of the top plate.   
By Robert Roy Britt
Senior writer

Updated: 1:41 p.m. ET May 13, 2005A new type of
battery based on the radioactive decay of nuclear
material is 10 times more powerful than similar
prototypes and should last a decade or more without a
charge, scientists announced this week.


 
The longevity would make the battery ideal for use in
pacemakers or other surgically implanted devices,
developers say, or it might power spacecraft or
deep-sea probes. 

You might also find these nuclear batteries running
sensors and other small devices in your home in a few
years. Such devices "don't consume much power," said
University of Rochester electrical engineer Philippe
Fauchet, "and yet having to replace the battery every
so often is a real pain in the neck."

Fauchet told LiveScience the batteries could last a
dozen years. They're being developed at Rochester, and
the technology has been licensed by BetaBatt Inc.

How it works
The technology is called betavoltaics. It uses a
silicon wafer to capture electrons emitted by a
radioactive gas, such as tritium. It is similar to the
mechanics of converting sunlight into electricity in a
solar panel. 

Until now, betavoltaics has been unable to match
solar-cell efficiency. The reason is simple: When the
gas decays, its electrons shoot out in all directions.
Many of them are lost.

"For 50 years, people have been investigating
converting simple nuclear decay into usable energy,
but the yields were always too low," Fauchet
explained. "We've found a way to make the interaction
much more efficient, and we hope these findings will
lead to a new kind of battery that can pump out energy
for years."

Fauchet's team took the flat silicon surface, where
the electrons are captured and converted to a current,
and turned it into a three-dimensional surface by
adding deep pits.

Each pit is about 1 micron wide. That's four
ten-thousandths of an inch. They're more than 40
microns deep. 

Tritium is a radioactive form of hydrogen. Mixed with
chemicals that emit light, it is used to illuminate
exit signs without electricity — the sort commonly
found in schools and other public buildings.

"It is safe and can be implanted in the body," Fauchet
said. "The energetic particles emitted by tritium do
not penetrate inside the skin."

Tritium emits only low-energy particles "that can be
shielded by very thin materials, such as a sheet of
paper," said Gadeken of BetaBatt. "The
hermetically-sealed, metallic BetaBattery cases will
encapsulate the entire radioactive energy source, just
like a normal battery contains its chemical source so
it cannot escape."

The device is detailed in Friday's issue of Advanced
Materials.

  Click for related story 
Putting new life in battery technology
 
 


The manufacturing process is standard to the
semiconductor industry, so no other technology
breakthroughs are needed to bring the batteries to
market. Still, don't expect anything on the store
shelves for at least two years, Fauchet said. His team
is now working to improve the manufacturing process,
aiming for batteries many times more efficient than
those announced today. 

"If we are as successful as we think we may be, it
will take less than five years before this technology
is adopted," he said.

Graduate student Wei Sun of the University of Toronto
was lead author on the paper describing the work,
which was supported by the National Science
Foundation.

© 2005 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved. 



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