A 3D printed li-ion battery
I am concerned about writing anything related to Lithium. So I did research about it. I found out some favorable research about Lithium.
Please do the judgment for our reader’s.
According to Battery University, “Because of the inherent instability of lithium metal, research shifted to a non-metallic lithium battery using lithium ions. Although slightly lower in energy density, the lithium-ion system is safe, providing certain precautions are met when charging and discharging. Today, lithium-ion is one of the most successful and safe battery chemistries available. Two billion cells are produced every year”.
At the same time, according to Physics researchers at Virginia Commonwealth University,” they also found that the electrolytes in lithium-ion batteries (also known as Li-ion batteries) could be replaced with halogen-free electrolytes that are both nontoxic and environmentally friendly”.
According to Engadget,” A 3D printed li-ion battery is one of the challenges in creating smaller and smaller devices these days, such as wearables and phones, is that the batteries can take up a lot of room. Cases are often designed around standard battery sizes, and it often creates wasted space. Now, new research published in ACS Applied Energy Materials shows that it’s possible to 3D-print lithium-ion batteries into whatever shape you need”.
https://news.vcu.edu/article/Liion_batteries_contain_toxic_halogens_but_environmentally_friendly
https://batteryuniversity.com/learn/archive/lithium_ion_safety_concerns
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This entry was posted in 3D and 4D Additive Mechanical Engineering Design/ Wear Testing/ Materials Science/ Custom PC Builds Raspberry Pi/ LED Projects., 3D Printing Construction Technology/ Real Estate/ Housing/Architecture/ Challenges., 3D Printing/Fashion/ Jewelry/Art/Design/Creativity., 3D/4D Printing//Customized Sports/Athlete Safety,, 3D/4D/5D Printing emergence., Policy. and tagged 3D Printing: Environmentally Friendly, A 3D printed li-ion battery, Battery University, engadget, Virginia Commonwealth University.
3 thoughts on “A 3D printed li-ion battery”
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October 22, 2018 at 6:10 am
Thanks for liking my comment; you have a large footprint in the w.w.w.
3D printing is another tech advance which has blurred the lines between sci-fi and reality.
Perhaps you might -in the interests of internet safety- use https://duckduckgo.com/ as your search engine, not the Google beast. Also noted your e-mail address… Type “google” in my search box and see that you’re trusting the fox to guard the henhouse. One old posting: https://partneringwitheagles.wordpress.com/2014/01/03/the-information-youre-really-giving-google/
October 22, 2018 at 7:15 pm
Thank you so much:)
November 14, 2018 at 12:01 am
Bonjour ou Bonsoir
après le silence de la nuit
chaque jour renaît
avec le chant d’un oiseau joyeux
pour que nos réveils soient gais
la rosée pour rafraîchir nos pas
et le soleil au rendez-vous
moi je te souhaite une très belle journée ou soirée
Et tout ce que tu désires
Bisous, BERNARD
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