Charging battery only in 20 seconds


South Korea: Charging manual appliances and smartphones has become a routine of our daily life. Now new research has made the way to build a battery that can be fully charged with zero in just 20 seconds.

In this process, liquid electrolytes have been tested in energy or charge collection. Although these attempts have been made before, but on one hand, the charge was not safe for a long time and secondly they failed to fail.

The Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KIST), located in South Korea, has developed the world's first "Aquarius Hybrid Cucumber (HHC), which uses liquid electrolytes.


The ACHC battery and capacitor is combined with electrode electromagnetic electronics (electromagnetic) style electronically charged electrostatic charges. Then they include a liquid solution for the flow of grains. But despite the soluble, such batteries may be very safe and lasting from the normal battery batteries. Experts believe that the batteries of the batteries may be possible on the commercial scale of these batteries.

In normal battery electron moves between two materials, however one of the liquid batteries or anode is lost quickly. That is why so far, such durable batteries have not been made.

Korean specialists have used polymers containing graphic rather than traditional metals, and have made a battery uninode. On the other hand, the second mixture or cathode has been prepared from metal oxide. It has reduced the battery spending and waste speed.

The reason is that a barrel of carbonated carbon fibers on the anode, electron transfer is very well. This charges batteries with amazing speed and their utility remains even more than one hundred times charged. Such a closed battery can be fully charged in just 20 seconds.

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