An 18-year-old science student has made an astonishing breakthrough that will enable mobile phones and other batteries to be charged within seconds rather than the hours it takes today’s devices to power back up.
Saratoga, Calif. resident Eesha Khare made the breakthrough by creating a small supercapacitor that can fit inside a cell phone battery and enable ultra-fast electricity transfer and storage, delivering a full charge in 20-30 seconds instead of several hours.
The nano-tech device Khare created can supposedly withstand up to
100,000 charges, a 100-fold increase over current technology, and it's
flexible enough to be used in clothing or displays on any non-flat
surface.
It could also one day be used in car batteries and charging stations not
unlike those used by the Tesla Model S, which includes "supercharger"
technology that promises to charge vehicles in 30 minutes or less.
"I'm in a daze," Khare told CBS San Francisco after being honored among
the three finalists at the International Science and Engineering Fair in
Phoenix over the weekend. "I can't believe this happened."
...Khare was the runner-up to 19-year-old Romanian student Gorden E.
Moore, who created a low-cost artificial intelligence that can drive
vehicles. She tied with Louisiana 17-year-old Henry Wanjune, who figured
out new ways to measure dark matter and energy in space.
2 comments:
Uhhh..
I made a diorama and it shows Ben Franklin with a kite.....
I'm willing to be impressed depending completely on what Franklin was doing with the kite.
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