Writing in Sustainability, a team of scientists from China have reported a rapid charging strategy using AC incentive methods for Li-ion batteries which offers improvements over current charging strategies.
Scientists from East China Normal University and the Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics have collaborated on a new paper exploring the development of supercapacitor devices for flexible and wearable applications. Their research has appeared in the journal ACS Applied Energy Materials.
In an article recently published in the journal Additive Manufacturing Letters, researchers discussed electronic component embedding during selective laser sintering (SLS) methodology.
Many people consider battery-powered electronic devices such as cell phones, computers, and even electric vehicles to be essential. These gadgets, on the other hand, usually involve charging at least once a day.
Controlling electrical impulses with single molecules allows transistors in integrated circuits to be miniaturized down to the atomic level.
Researchers from ETH Zurich, Empa and the University of Zurich have developed a new material for an electronic component that can be used in a wider range of applications than its predecessors. Such components will help create electronic circuits that emulate the human brain and that are more efficient than conventional computers at performing machine-learning tasks.
A research group at Toyohashi University of Technology’s Department of Electrical and Electronic Information Engineering established a major manufacturing technology of Li7P3S11 solid electrolytes for all-solid-state batteries.
In an article recently published in the open-access journal Energies, researchers discussed the role of a gas turbine cycle in the improvement of electric vehicle autonomy.
In an article recently published in the journal ACS Energy Letters, researchers discussed the physical energy amplification using a skin-adherent piezoelectric patch having bio-inspired hierarchically arrayed microsuckers.
In an article recently published in the open-access journal Polymers, researchers discussed the utility of bio-based polymeric substrates on printed hybrid electronics.
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