http://beta.cosmosmagazine.com/physical-sciences/graphene-promises-better-way-power-electric-cars
[FONT=proxima_nova]Supercapacitors with big storage capacity could be woven into the fabric of a vehicle. Phil Dooley reports.
[/FONT][FONT=chaparral_pro]The next generation of electric cars may have their power sources neatly woven into the fabric of the chassis or bodywork, rather than heavy batteries that are slow to charge.
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[FONT=chaparral_pro]Yuan Chen and his team from Nanyang Technical University in Singapore have mixed graphene and carbon nanotubes to make a long, thin fibre, about the thickness of a human hair, that functions as a high power-density supercapacitor. The fibre could be woven into a flexible fabric that could be incorporated into any electricity-hungry gadget.
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[FONT=chaparral_pro]Supercapacitors, like batteries, can store electricity, soaking up charge on pairs of carbon plates. Unlike batteries, they charge in a matter of seconds and can release all their energy in a huge surge if needed. But their storage capacity is puny compared to batteries. Something that combined the features of supercapacitors and batteries would be revolutionary. “A supercapacitor with energy density comparable with a battery cell is really the holy grail,” says physicist Stephen Bosi from University of New England in New South Wales.[/FONT]
[FONT=chaparral_pro]In an attempt to create such a supercapacitor, Chen turned to graphene. He ...
[/FONT]http://beta.cosmosmagazine.com/physical-sciences/graphene-promises-better-way-power-electric-cars
[FONT=proxima_nova]
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Graphene promises a better way to power electric cars
[FONT=proxima_nova]Supercapacitors with big storage capacity could be woven into the fabric of a vehicle. Phil Dooley reports.
[/FONT][FONT=chaparral_pro]The next generation of electric cars may have their power sources neatly woven into the fabric of the chassis or bodywork, rather than heavy batteries that are slow to charge.
[/FONT]
[FONT=chaparral_pro]Yuan Chen and his team from Nanyang Technical University in Singapore have mixed graphene and carbon nanotubes to make a long, thin fibre, about the thickness of a human hair, that functions as a high power-density supercapacitor. The fibre could be woven into a flexible fabric that could be incorporated into any electricity-hungry gadget.
[/FONT]
[FONT=chaparral_pro]Supercapacitors, like batteries, can store electricity, soaking up charge on pairs of carbon plates. Unlike batteries, they charge in a matter of seconds and can release all their energy in a huge surge if needed. But their storage capacity is puny compared to batteries. Something that combined the features of supercapacitors and batteries would be revolutionary. “A supercapacitor with energy density comparable with a battery cell is really the holy grail,” says physicist Stephen Bosi from University of New England in New South Wales.[/FONT]
[FONT=chaparral_pro]In an attempt to create such a supercapacitor, Chen turned to graphene. He ...
[/FONT]http://beta.cosmosmagazine.com/physical-sciences/graphene-promises-better-way-power-electric-cars
[FONT=proxima_nova]
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