Quote from: geemy on April 05, 2023, 20:23:16according to the news, battery density doubles every week. outside the laba, it's more like every decade
No, the problem is a little different. When they mean 2X, 4X, 10X and etc, they generally mean like when you have a CD/DVD/Bluray drive
A CD drive 1X is 153.6 kB/s, while a 1X DVD drive is 1385.0 kB/s. So DVD is 9X faster than CD.
But it is still way slower than a 52X CD drive which would be 7987.2 kB/s
The same applies when you hear them talk about X times more dense. They don't actually mean current LION batteries, they mean X times more than 1X LION batteries
So while they may have higher potential over time, just like DVDs did. CDs were still a better buy for a few years unless you really needed it.
Quote from: NikoB on April 05, 2023, 23:12:56Maybe these technologies really have big progress in labs, but the authorities are afraid to give people a hand military grenade in the yours hands, because, the energy intensity (and instant energy out in case of problems) of batteries with 4-5 times more capacity at the same weight as it is now - will lead to exactly this result - in the case of an instantaneous chain reaction of heat release, the effect will be like from a military grenade burst. Especially laptop much more big batteries. Even now, the authorities do not allow large-capacity lithium-ion batteries to be transported on aircraft at the limits of modern energy density for lithium-on techology.
Now imagine if you had a military grenade in your back pocket all the time with an unknown state of the pin...
Sorry, what are you talking about? The instant energy of pretty much any battery would be way less than say gasoline because not only are batteries less energy dense (your gains are on efficiency), they are often compartmentalize into modules and cells. So your limit will always be a single cell. Otherwise, pressurize almost anything and it can be a deadly weapon.
Quote from: anan on April 06, 2023, 11:41:12The only reactive material in Lion batteries is the Lithium itself. If a technology does not increase the amount of lithium in a battery then it will not be more explosive than others. Current tech is no way near the theoretical maximum energy that the lithium in current batteries can store. Many battery improvements are specifically meant to address the safety side of battery improvements (puncture, heat protection). This article mentions that this novel tech mitigates dendrite formation - one of the causes of battery degradation that can lead them to explode.
As long as someone can demonstrate that their new tech is safe then it will be approved. And if time proves that they were wrong then it will only be dealt as a consequence (lawsuits, recalls)
No, what reacts in the lithium ion battery isn't the lithium, the lithium is in hardware form and as dangerous(as far as flammability) as sodium in table salt or potassium in a banana. What ignites is the fluorocarbon liquid electrolyte. One of the advantage of moving to solid state or dry electrolytes is huge decrease in flammability.