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"BetaBatt" tritium powered battery could last 20
years
Just
don't expect to see it in your next PDA or cellphone
May 13,
2005 -- (MobileVillage) -- Using some of the same manufacturing
techniques that produce microchips, researchers have created
a porous-silicon diode that may lead to improved betavoltaics.
Such devices convert low levels of radiation into electricity
and can have useful lives spanning several decades.
While
producing as little as one-thousandth of the power of conventional
chemical batteries, the new "BetaBattery" concept
is more efficient and potentially less expensive than similar
designs and should be easier to manufacture.
If the
new diode proves successful when incorporated into a finished
battery, it could help power such hard-to-service, long-life
systems as structural sensors on bridges, climate monitoring
equipment and satellites.
The battery's staying power is tied to the nature of its
fuel, tritium, a hydrogen isotope that releases electrons
in a process called beta decay. The porous-silicon semiconductors
generate electricity by absorbing the electrons, just as a
solar cell generates electricity by absorbing energy from
incoming photons of light.
The new diode is described in the May 13 issue of Advanced
Materials. The project is supported by grants from the
National Science Foundation
(NSF) Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program, and
is lead by researchers from the University of Rochester, the
University of Toronto, Rochester Institute of Technology and
BetaBatt, Inc. of Houston, Texas.
Researchers have been attempting to convert radiation into
electricity since the development of the transistor more than
50 years ago. Mastering the junctions between relatively electron-rich
and electron-poor regions of semiconductor material (p-n junctions)
led to many modern electronic products.
Yet, while engineers have been successful at capturing electromagnetic
radiation with solar cells, the flat, thin devices have been
unable to collect enough beta-decay electrons to yield a viable
betavoltaic device.
The BetaBatt will not be the first battery to harness a radioactive
source, or even the first to use tritium, but the new cell
will have a unique advantage - the half-millimeter-thick silicon
wafer into which researchers have etched a network of deep
pores. This structure vastly increases the exposed surface
area, creating a device that is 10 times more efficient than
planar designs.
"The 3-D porous silicon configuration is excellent for
absorbing essentially all the kinetic energy of the source
electrons," says co-author Nazir Kherani of the University
of Toronto. Instead of generating current by absorbing electrons
at the outermost layer of a thin sheet, surfaces deep within
these porous silicon wafers accommodate a much larger amount
of incoming radiation. In early tests, nearly all electrons
emitted during the tritium's beta decay were absorbed.
There were a number of practical reasons for selecting tritium
as the source of energy, says co-author Larry Gadeken of BetaBatt
- particularly safety and containment.
"Tritium emits only low energy beta particles (electrons)
that can be shielded by very thin materials, such as a sheet
of paper," says Gadeken. "The hermetically-sealed,
metallic BetaBattery cases will encapsulate the entire radioactive
energy source, just like a normal battery contains its chemical
source so it cannot escape."
Even if the hermetic case were to be breached, adds Gadeken,
the source material the team is developing will be a hard
plastic that incorporates tritium into its chemical structure.
Unlike a chemical paste, the plastic cannot not leak out or
leach into the surrounding environment.
Researchers and manufacturers have been producing porous
silicon for decades, and it is commonly used for antireflective
coatings, light emitting devices, and photon filters for fiber
optics. However, the current research is the first patented
betavoltaic application for porous silicon and the first time
that 3-D p-n diodes have been created with standard semiconductor
industry techniques.
"The betavoltaic and photovoltaic applications of 3-D
porous silicon diodes will result in an exciting arena of
additional uses for this versatile material," says co-author
Philippe Fauchet of the University of Rochester.
"This is the first time that uniform p-n junctions have
been made in porous silicon, which is exciting from the point
of view of materials science," says Fauchet. For example,
because of its characteristics and photon sensitivity, each
diode pore could serve as an individual detector, potentially
creating an extremely high-resolution image sensor.
"The ease of using standard semiconductor processing
technology to fabricate 3-D p-n junctions was surprising,"
adds co-author Karl Hirschman of the Rochester Institute of
Technology. That manufacturing ease is an important breakthrough
for increasing production and lowering costs, and it makes
the device scalable and versatile for a range of applications.
"The initial applications will be for remote or inaccessible
sensors and devices where the availability of long-life power
is critical," says Gadeken.
The BetaBattery may prove better suited to certain tasks
than chemical batteries when power needs are limited. The
structures are robust--tolerant to motion and shock, and functional
from -148° Fahrenheit (-100° Celsius) to 302°
F (150°C)--and may never have to be changed for the lifetime
of the device.
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