USING RECHARGEABLE BATTERIES IN MOBILES ,LAPTOPS,E.T.C

TRY USING RECHARGEABLE BATTERIES EVERYWHERE POSSIBLE.
LET ME STATE YOU SOME REASONS WHY DO WE NEED TO USE RECHARGEABLE BATTERIES..
Rechargeable VS. Standard Batteries
Standard batteries come "off-the-shelf" at maximum strength when new. They cannot normally be recharged. They are designed for a single use, and then to be thrown away or recycled. However, the electrical capacity of rechargeable batteries can be renewed, allowing the user dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of "power cycles." Rechargeable batteries are generally more expensive than single-use standard batteries at the point of purchase. But because the rechargeable battery can be used and reused, over and over again, their cost over a lifetime is typically much lower than the repeated purchase of a standard, single-use battery over and over again. For this reason, rechargeable batteries are generally the battery of choice for commonly used household items.
AND THE BIGGEST BENEFIT OF USING RECHARGEABLE BATTERIES IS
Fast Charging
For applications that require a fast charge, for example, a mobile device for a busy professional constantly on the go and who is never in one place for long, the lithium iron phosphate battery tends to do well. They also discharge energy faster than other battery technologies.
Longest Lasting Batteries
The longest-lasting AA batteries on record are from Panasonic’s Evolta line.generally lasting of the batteries depend on man parameters like..
including time between usages, charging times, number of cycles, how fast the battery was charged, and temperature.
WE CAN ALSO INCREASE THE EFFICIENCY BY KEEPING MANY THING IN MIND WHILE USING IT ...
Avoid storing the battery in warm temperatures, especially when fully charged. Higher temperatures strain the battery and impede its ability to hold a charge. For best results, store lithium batteries with about a 40 percent charge. Don’t store them fully-charged and don’t store them fully depleted.
MANY PROGRESS IS GOING ON IN THE FIELD OF DEVELOPMENT OF RENEWABLE RESOURCES BATTERIES..
SOME OF THEM ARE..
Researchers Develop Long-Lasting, Water-based Nuclear Power Battery
For the first time, the researchers at the University of Missouri have created a nuclear-powered battery, using a water-based solution, which is both long-lasting and more efficient than current battery technologies. It could be used as a reliable power supply in automobiles, spacecrafts and other applications which demand longevity and efficiency. The team's research was published in the journal Nature.
According to Jae W Kwon, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering and nuclear engineering in the College of Engineering at MU, betavoltaics, a battery technology that generates power from radiation, has been studied as an energy source since the 1950s.
The battery uses a radioactive isotope called strontium-90 that enhances electrochemical energy produced in a water-based solution, which means it boosts the chemical reactions involving free radicals at greater electron energy levels.
The researches included a nanostructure titanium dioxide electrode (the common element found in sunscreens and UV blockers) with a platinum coating collects and effectively converts energy into electrons.
As, a result, when high -energy beta radiation passes through the platinum and the nanoporous titanium dioxide, electron-hole pairs are produced within the titanium dioxide, creating an electron flow and a resultant electric current. Thus this is a much more efficient way to produce extremely long-lasting and reliable energy.
Kwon said," Water acts as a buffer and surface plasmons created in the device turned out to be very useful in increasing its efficiency. The ionic solution is not easily frozen at very low temperatures and could work in a wide variety of applications including car batteries and, if packaged properly, perhaps spacecraft".
He added that that controlled nuclear technologies are not essentially dangerous as people already use them in their lives, which include fire detectors in bedrooms and emergency exit signs in buildings.
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