from the site: 
Rewire
 
 
More Good News About The 'Scientific  Accident That May Change The World'
 
by  _Chris Clarke_ (http://www.kcet.org/user/profile/cclarke) 
on February 21, 2013


 
That battery life video that had gone viral due to _a  recent post on 
UpWorthy_ 
(http://www.upworthy.com/see-the-scientific-accident-that-may-change-the-world-or-at-least-your-battery-l)
  (and which _we  told you about Tuesday_ 
(http://www.kcet.org/news/rewire/science/super-fast-biodegradable-batteries-
made-of-carbon.html) ) now has an update. We told you that researchers at  
Ric Kamen's lab at UCLA had found a way to make a non-toxic, highly 
efficient  energy storage medium out of pure carbon using absurdly simple 
technology.  Today, we can report that the same team may well have found a way 
to make 
that  process scale up to mass-production levels.
 
The recap: Graphene, a very simple carbon polymer, can be used as the basic 
 component of a "supercapacitor" -- an electrical power storage device that 
 charges far more rapidly than chemical batteries. Unlike other 
supercapacitors,  though, graphene's structure also offers a high "energy 
density," -- 
it can hold  a lot of electrons, meaning that it could conceivably rival or 
outperform  batteries in the amount of charge it can hold. Kaner Lab 
researcher Maher  El-Kady found a way to create sheets of graphene a single 
carbon 
atom thick by  covering a plastic surface with graphite oxide solution and 
bombarding it with  precisely controlled laser light.  
English translation: He painted a DVD with a liquid carbon  solution and 
stuck it into a standard-issue DVD burner. 
The result: Absurdly cheap graphene sheets one atom thick,  which held a 
surprising amount of charge without further modification. 
That work was reported a year ago; we mentioned it due to the video virally 
 making the rounds this week. Late Tuesday, UCLA _announced_ 
(http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/ucla-researchers-develop-new-technique-243553.aspx)
  
 that El-Kady and Kaner have a _new  article in press_ 
(http://www.nature.com/ncomms/journal/v4/n2/full/ncomms2446.html) , in the 
upcoming issue of 
Nature Communications, describing  a method by which El-Kady's earlier, 
slightly homebrewed fabricating process  shown in the video can be made more 
efficient, raising the possibility of mass  production. As the authors say in 
their article abstract, 
More than 100 micro-supercapacitors can be produced on a single  disc in 30 
min or less. 
El-Kady and Kaner found a way to embed small electrodes within each 
graphene  unit, and place the whole thing on a flexible substrate that allows 
the  
supercapacitor to be bent. The team is already claiming energy density  
comparable to existing thin-film lithium ion batteries. 
In _the  video_ 
(http://www.kcet.org/news/rewire/science/super-fast-biodegradable-batteries-made-of-carbon.html)
  we shared Tuesday, Kaner says that 
this technology, if it pans out,  offers possibilities like a smart phone 
getting a full day's charge in a second  or two, or an electric car reaching 
"full" in a minute. This week's _press  release from UCLA_ 
(http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/ucla-researchers-develop-new-technique-243553.aspx)
  
offers other intriguing possibilities: 
The new micro-supercapacitors are also highly bendable and  twistable, 
making them potentially useful as energy-storage devices in  flexible 
electronics like roll-up displays and TVs, e-paper, and even wearable  
electronics. 
The researchers showed the utility of their new laser-scribed  graphene 
micro-supercapacitor in an all-solid form, which would enable any new  device 
incorporating them to be more easily shaped and flexible. The  
micro-supercapacitors can also be fabricated directly on a chip using the same  
technique, 
making them highly useful for integration into  micro-electromechanical 
systems (MEMS) or complementary  metal-oxide-semiconductors (CMOS). As they can 
be 
directly integrated on-chip,  these micro-supercapacitors may help to 
better extract energy from solar,  mechanical and thermal sources and thus make 
more efficient self-powered  systems. They could also be fabricated on the 
backside of solar cells in both  portable devices and rooftop installations to 
store power generated during the  day for use after sundown, helping to 
provide electricity around the clock  when connection to the grid is not 
possible.
Kaner says that his lab is now looking for partners in industry that can 
help  make these graphene supercapacitors on an industrial scale. 
It's tempting to be cynical about the possibility of a magic bullet energy  
storage solution; such a breakthrough could solve any number of problems 
from  annoying dead smart phones to two-hour charge times for electric cars to 
an  inefficient power distribution grid, and it's easy to really want this 
kind of  thing to be true. Plenty of seemingly promising technical 
innovations in the  last few years haven't lived up to their hopeful hype. 
There's 
always the chance  that further study will reveal a fatal flaw in graphene 
supercapacitor  technology. But for the time being, ReWire officially has its 
hopes up, at least  a little.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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