Looks like a lot of on-going research on storage technology:

http://www.physorg.com/news161862319.html

A new type of air-fuelled battery could give up to ten times the
energy storage of designs currently available.

This step-change in capacity could pave the way for a new generation
of electric cars, mobile phones and laptops.

The research work, funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences
Research Council (EPSRC), is being led by researchers at the
University of St Andrews with partners at Strathclyde and Newcastle.

The new design has the potential to improve the performance of
portable electronic products and give a major boost to the renewable
energy industry. The batteries will enable a constant electrical
output from sources such as wind or solar, which stop generating when
the weather changes or night falls.

Improved capacity is thanks to the addition of a component that uses
oxygen drawn from the air during discharge, replacing one chemical
constituent used in rechargeable batteries today. Not having to carry
the chemicals around in the battery offers more energy for the same
size battery. Reducing the size and weight of batteries with the
necessary charge capacity has been a long-running battle for
developers of electric cars.

The STAIR (St Andrews Air) cell should be cheaper than today's
rechargeables too. The new component is made of porous carbon, which
is far less expensive than the lithium cobalt oxide it replaces.

This four-year research project, which reaches its halfway mark in
July, builds on the discovery at the university that the carbon
component's interaction with air can be repeated, creating a cycle of
charge and discharge. Subsequent work has more than tripled the
capacity to store charge in the STAIR cell.

Principal investigator on the project, Professor Peter Bruce of the
Chemistry Department at the University of St Andrews, says: "Our
target is to get a five to ten fold increase in storage capacity,
which is beyond the horizon of current lithium batteries. Our results
so far are very encouraging and have far exceeded our expectations."

"The key is to use oxygen in the air as a re-agent, rather than carry
the necessary chemicals around inside the battery," says Bruce.

The oxygen, which will be drawn in through a surface of the battery
exposed to air, reacts within the pores of the carbon to discharge the
battery. "Not only is this part of the process free, the carbon
component is much cheaper than current technology," says Bruce. He
estimates that it will be at least five years before the STAIR cell is
commercially available.

The project is focused on understanding more about how the chemical
reaction of the battery works and investigating how to improve it. The
research team is also working towards making a STAIR cell prototype
suited, in the first instance, for small applications, such as mobile
phones or MP3 players.

Source: Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (news : web)

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See website for images and hyperlinks.

Terry

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