Scientists at U.C. Santa Barbara have developed a new kind of “liquid battery” that can capture sunlight and release it later as heat, a breakthrough researchers say could help solve one of renewable ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Sunlight-storing biomolecule releases heat on demand, beats lithium-ion batteries
Chemists at UC Santa Barbara have developed a molecule that captures sunlight, stores it ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Organic molecule stores renewable energy with record stability, paving the way for better flow batteries
What if the energy produced by wind turbines on a beautiful summer day could be stored until January to heat homes in the ...
A new bio-inspired molecule captures solar energy and releases it as heat on demand, outperforming lithium-ion batteries.
Chemists at Université de Montréal, working with colleagues at Concordia University, have developed a new organic molecule that can store electrical energy for months with almost no degradation.
One of the biggest challenges of renewable energy is what happens when the sun is not shining. Solar panels produce electricity during the day, but storing that energy for nighttime or cloudy weather ...
A research team from the University of Basel, Switzerland, has developed a new molecule modeled on plant photosynthesis: under the influence of light, it stores two positive and two negative charges ...
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