MIT researchers extend computer life without batteries
By Ben Ames
,
IDG News Service
, 03/07/2006
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Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have found a way to extend the power life of mobile computers.
Instead of using batteries, they draw power from an electronic device called an ultracapacitor. The approach is still several
years away from being used as the main electricity source for commercial laptops and handhelds, but is already used for backup
power in many small consumer products.
"A number of electronic devices already use commercial ultracapacitors for specialized functions," said Joel Schindall, a
professor in MIT's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, in Cambridge, Mass.
"For example, a clock radio may use an ultracapacitor as a keep-alive source in case of power failure, and even the old Palm
III used an ultracapacitor to retain its memory while the AA batteries were changed."
The new technology could shake up the retail computer business, where computer makers already compete for market share by
boasting of more power-efficient machines.
Chip makers battle for business by launching more efficient processors like Intel's Centrino and Advanced Micro Devices' Turion,
trading high performance speed for mobile endurance.
HP also says its customers demand longer run-times. The company announced Monday that its HP Compaq nx9400 notebook will run
on three levels of battery packs. Those range from the standard, four-hour unit to a substitute battery that adds five more
hours, and a clip-on, supplementary battery that adds another 10 hours.
The speed at which a battery charges is also important to users. HP says its enhanced, lithium ion battery can gain 90% of
a full charge after just 90 minutes of being plugged into a wall outlet.
By comparison, a consumer with a cell phone powered by MIT's ultracapacitor could gain a complete recharge in just a few seconds,
Schindall says.
The new device is called a nanotube-enhanced ultracapacitor, or NEU. It works by applying nanotechnology to an existing electrical
device; the capacitor.
Generic capacitors store energy as an electrical field. That is more efficient than standard batteries, which get their energy
from chemical reactions. Even more efficient is the ultracapacitor, a capacitor-based storage cell that provides quick bursts
of instant energy. The drawback is size -- ultracapacitors need to be much larger than batteries to hold the same charge.
The MIT researchers solved this problem by taking advantage of the enormous surface area of nanotubes; molecular-scale straws
of carbon atoms that enable ultracapacitors to store electrical fields at the atomic level. Storage capacity (and charging
speed) in an ultracapacitor is proportional to the surface area of the electrodes, so the nanotubes provide a great leap forward.
Despite this promise, researchers say they still have three to five years more work before they can replace a computer's main
battery.
One drawback is that the ultracapacitor provides direct current power. That is suitable for running power-off functions like
a laptop's clock, but most desktop devices use alternating current for their main operations.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
Comments (1)
Computers use DCBy Anonymous on January 16, 2009, 1:42 pmLaptop and desktop computers use DC current not AC. The AC current that runs through your wall is converted into various DC currents by the power supply. LCD monitors...
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