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Offline asian1Topic starter

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Nuclear Powered Long Life Battery
« on: May 16, 2005, 08:16:02 AM »
BetaBatt had announced small long life battery powered by nuclear material. The battery will supply power for more than 12 years.

Is this battery safe for users?
What about the price/performance of the new battery, compared to Alkaline, Li-Ion, fuel cell or other technology?
What about the voltage and the current?
What about waste management problem of the nuclear battery?

From MSNBC:

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."
 

Offline bloodline

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Re: Nuclear Powered Long Life Battery
« Reply #1 on: May 16, 2005, 10:12:04 AM »
How did I guess this would be posted by asian1? :-)

Offline Cymric

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Re: Nuclear Powered Long Life Battery
« Reply #2 on: May 16, 2005, 11:27:10 AM »
The website of BetaBatt themselves is very sparse: not more than a single announcement and an email address. It contains just enough information to be of some interest to investors, so there simply isn't much to go on.

However, I think I can answer some of your questions. Provided the battery is sealed and does not leak, it is safe for users. Tritium is radioactive, but the energy it emits is very 'soft' in comparison to that emitted by other isotopes. Only by cracking open the container and then swallowing the contents would you be in danger, but my data tables indicate you would need to ingest or inhale (there is no difference here) quite an amount of tritium (1.1 GBq) before you are exposed to the maxium yearly dose of 20 mSv. It might be a problem for children and pregnant women, since the maximum allowed dose is much smaller for them.

The site itself says that the first types are expected to reach a power output of 400 microwatts per cubic centimetre of battery volume. It depends on the properties of the silicon how much amps and voltage this translates into: I literally have no idea how to calculate that. However, the 400 allows me to estimate the amount of activity in that volume: between 1,5 and 2 GBq. So you would have to be  quite careful with a cracked battery, and in fact have a nasty problem on your hands since it is illegal to throw it away just like that.

In other words, only BetaBatt and/or a few select subsidaries are probably allowed to recycle the batteries: it is just a matter of opening them, withdrawing the tritium (most likely in the form of water), concentrating it to desired activity and filling a new battery with the concentrate. There is no toxic waste product to deal with: the tritium decays into inert helium. You of course have to allow for a little room for the helium to expand into since it is a gas. A rough calculation informs me that after 1 half life, you would need about 0,3 cubic centimetres per cubic centimetre of active battery to maintain atmospheric pressure. It is quite easy to construct a metal case which can withstand higher pressures, so the expansion volume can easily become a factor 10 or so smaller. (In fact, regulation probably stipulates that the case already be tough to resist accidental cracking, killing two birds with one stone.)

Price? Hard to say, but it will not be cheap.

I like this invention quite a lot: I'm sure that BetaBatt will also see plenty of opportunity to market a new and vastly more efficient type of tritium detector. Because of the low energy of emitted radiation, tritium is hard to detect; this device has to be very efficient in capturing the radiation, and thus simultaneously in detecting it.
Some people say that cats are sneaky, evil and cruel. True, and they have many other fine qualities as well.
 

Offline X-ray

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Re: Nuclear Powered Long Life Battery
« Reply #3 on: May 16, 2005, 12:26:23 PM »
I'm sure they've got the containment/storage of the tritium licked, after all we've had tritium gun sights for years now, and they are only glass vials.
I would go for those batteries too, depending on the price.
 

Offline blobrana

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Re: Nuclear Powered Long Life Battery
« Reply #4 on: May 17, 2005, 08:22:21 AM »
Hum,
intresting,
I just wonder if it’s possible to turn the energiser bunny into a fast breeder…
Boom, boom (quote from Basil Brush)



Offline X-ray

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Re: Nuclear Powered Long Life Battery
« Reply #5 on: May 17, 2005, 10:27:36 AM »
Actually your last post and mine suddenly made me think of that John Lee Hooker song:

Boom Boom Boom Boom
gonna shoot you right down
right off of your feet
take you home with me

Sniper kitty is at the window and he has new batteries
 

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Re: Nuclear Powered Long Life Battery
« Reply #6 on: May 17, 2005, 10:55:49 AM »
Quote

blobrana wrote:
Hum,
intresting,
I just wonder if it’s possible to turn the energiser bunny into a fast breeder…
Boom, boom (quote from Basil Brush)




Never mind the energiser bunny, just think about the everlasting rampant rabbit.  Anne Summers sales would triple over night! ;-)