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Moisture in the air prepares a rechargeable battery

 Australia: Australian experts have come up with the idea of ​​a self-charging battery technology that collects electricity from water vapor in the air.


We know that half of the energy from the sun is used to make water vapor in oceans and rivers, and that moisture is everywhere. The Australian company Strategic Elements and the University of South Wales have developed a flexible self-charging battery that can provide a fair amount of power to many small devices.



This technology is called 'energy ink' or energy ink, which is made of environmentally friendly and safe material. Currently it can be applied to wearable medical devices where body moisture can also be charged.

When there is water vapor or moisture on one side of the power generating experiment cell, the H + protons move to the dry side and thus the separation of charge begins.


No further details were given under the guise of trade secrets, but it did say that graphene technology was used. It is called the Graphene Oxide Moisture Electric Generator (MEGS). Details of the study are published in the journal NineNews.


This moisture-charged battery has been tested in a laboratory and used to run calculators and small devices. The details are applied to the electrodes on a thin layer of FTO-style glass and a mixture of silver and paraffin oxide. It should be noted that this layer is the most active which is called functional layer.


Moisture accumulates on one side of the device and the other dries. As long as the functional layer is dry, the protons there remain inactive. As the moisture balance changes on both sides. This initiates the process of ionization and the formation of carboxylic acid COOH in the functional group and the release of positive charge to form hydrogen ions or hydrons.


Now the hydrons start moving to the dry part and after charging they start to form voltage. In this way the charge starts to accumulate due to moisture.