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![]() by Staff Writers Bristol UK (SPX) Jan 26, 2020
British university researchers have turned their attention to deserted nuclear power plants and the tonnes of waste they still house despite long ago having closed down. What they have stumbled upon seems to store great potential, even when it comes to space travel. University of Bristol researchers have developed and tested next-generation diamond batteries that exploit energy from radioactive materials, thereby sharpening the issue of nuclear waste recycling, the University website reads. The work is being done as part of a project called Advanced Self-Powered sensor units in Intense Radiation Environments, or ASPIRE. The first power plant that was looked into in terms of potentially applicable waste was the Berkeley Power Station in Gloucestershire, the UK. Although decommissioned back in 1989, it has only now been cleared of dangerous by-products. For instance, carbon-14 isotopes extracted from graphite blocks, which the plant had previously manufactured, have been infused in a testing mode with wafer-thin diamonds to create the batteries. The latter, researchers boast, can supply power on a "near-infinite basis" and be widely used in anything from the manufacturing of hearing aids and pacemakers, to boosting spacecraft capacities. The potential is massive, indeed, the researchers argue, as in the UK alone, around 100,000 tonnes of nuclear waste are buried in the ground in the form of graphite blocks. "The ultimate aim is to have a factory based at one of the former power stations in the South West that takes Carbon-14 isotopes directly from the graphite blocks for use in diamond batteries", said Professor Tom Scott, director of the South West Nuclear Hub contending that it would significantly cut the radioactivity of the remaining material, "making it easier and safer to manage." According to the academic, with quite a few of the UK's nuclear power plants set to go offline in the years to come, chances are that the material on the ground will go for "so many great uses". The diamond batteries are already being tested in the most extreme conditions possible, with James Barker from the University of Bristol's Faculty of Engineering, expressing positive expectations from the breakthrough: "Eventually, a highly powerful version of a diamond battery could power a mobile phone", he said, cited by the Independent.
![]() ![]() Will the future's super batteries be made of seawater? Odense, Denmark (SPX) Jan 24, 2020 We all know the rechargeable and efficient lithium ion (Li-ion) batteries sitting in our smartphones, laptops and also in electric cars. Unfortunately, lithium is a limited resource, so it will be a challenge to satisfy the worlds' growing demand for relatively cheap batteries. Therefore, researchers are now looking for alternatives to the Li-ion battery. A promising alternative is to replace lithium with the metal sodium - to make Na-ion batteries. Sodium is found in large quantities in sea ... read more
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