Super-Charged Supercapacitors for Speedy Battery Recharging
Supercapacitors run on static electricity and they can recharge and deliver power faster than conventional batteries. Their main drawback is how much energy they can store. But a new technique for making supercapacitors, developed by chemist Richard Kaner of UCLA , may eliminate that disadvantage and propel them to the forefront of the renewable energy world.
More From SAE Media Group
Power Management INSIDER
Prize-Winning Technology for Large-Scale Energy Storage
Battery & Electrification Technology
An Energy-Storing Concrete-Based Supercapacitor
Battery & Electrification Technology
A Sodium-Aluminum Battery Aims to Integrate Renewables for Grid Resiliency
Battery Technology
Enhancing Hybrid Flow Battery Electrodes with Nanomaterials
More
Aerospace & Defense Tech Briefs
Rolls-Royce and Superdielectrics Explore Supercapacitor Technology
Tech Briefs
Behold: The Oxygen-Ion Battery
Battery & Electrification Technology
Oxygen-Ion Battery: A Solution for Large Energy Storage Systems
Battery & Electrification Technology
Recyclable ‘Water Batteries’ That Won’t Catch Fire
Battery Technology
Rechargeable Cement-Based Batteries
Power Electronics INSIDER
Microgrids are a Key to Grid Resiliency
Power Management INSIDER
New Wearable Device Turns the Body Into a Battery
Power Electronics INSIDER
Sustainable Energy using “Information Batteries”
Power Electronics INSIDER
Sleep Mode Makes Internet of Energy More Energy Efficient
Power Electronics INSIDER
Indoor Photovoltaics Spark a Sustainable Revolution
Green Design & Manufacturing
Electrochemical Double Layer Capacitors
Power Electronics INSIDER
Wind Turbine Enhances Electrical Grid Stability
Battery & Electrification Technology
Fast-Charging, Long-Running, Bendable Supercapacitor
Power Management INSIDER
Big Plans to Save the Planet Depend on Nanoscopic Materials Improving Energy Storage
Power Management INSIDER
Used Nissan LEAF Batteries Given “Second Life”
Battery & Electrification Technology
New Products