If you've got an electronic device, you need power either in the form of a cable or a battery. If you've got a battery, you still need a means of charging it. South Korean battery makers have created the MetalCell, a magnesium battery based on 2,000-year-old technology that can be charged with saltwater or, barring that, urine.
MetalCell was designed with militaries in mind; on the modern battlefield, soldiers rely on a growing array of electronics to execute their missions, but when operating in remote areas or cut off from support, those devices can run out of juice at inopportune moments. But MetalCell can sit in the back of a Humvee, in a remote bunker, or in a locker at a forward operating base for years, waiting to power up electrical devices in a pinch.
Fitted with magnesium plates inside, the MetalCell can be charged up with nothing more than the addition of saltwater. The sodium in the salt reacts with the magnesium to create a dose of low-voltage power that can power up laptop, a flashlight, night vision specs, etc. when no other source is available. The output can keep a laptop humming for more than four hours and can be recharged with fresh saltwater until the magnesium begins to deteriorate.
Soldiers can pool salt from their Meals, Ready-to-Eat (MREs) to create the proper sodium solution, but failing that, soldiers could also charge up the MetalCell with their urine (and given the blandness of MREs, they might opt to).
Source
Since I can't imagine MRE's having improved over time, I aam going to agree with you on their blandness.
ReplyDeletecool post I think that one of the best part about this advancement is that improvement are bound to happen and who knows imagine a self recharged battery will come along. Thanks for stopping by my blog. I am working so hard. I read ur entries but with my schedule I am not able to blog or to respond.
ReplyDeleteCool! Laine xx
ReplyDeleteAnother great use of a natural resource. And to think I've been wasting it in the bushes all these years.
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