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Scientists design novel battery that runs on atomic waste
Ohio State News ^ | February 25th 2025 | Tatyana Woodall

Posted on 03/05/2025 1:14:35 PM PST by Red Badger

Researchers have developed a battery that can convert nuclear energy into electricity via light emission, a new study suggests.

Nuclear power plants, which generate about 20% of all electricity produced in the United States, produce almost no greenhouse gas emissions. However, these systems do create radioactive waste, which can be dangerous to human health and the environment. Safely disposing of this waste can be challenging.

Using a combination of scintillator crystals, high-density materials that emit light when they absorb radiation, and solar cells, the team, led by researchers from The Ohio State University, demonstrated that ambient gamma radiation could be harvested to produce a strong enough electric output to power microelectronics, like microchips.

To test this battery, which is a prototype about 4 cubic centimeters small, researchers used two different radioactive sources, cesium-137, one of the most significant fission products that comes from spent nuclear fuel, and cobalt-60, a nuclear activation product. The battery was tested at Ohio State’s Nuclear Reactor Laboratory. The NRL supports student and faculty research, student education, and service to industry – it does not produce electrical power.

Their results showed that when cesium-137 was used, the battery generated 288 nanowatts. Yet with the much stronger isotope cobalt-60, the battery produced 1.5 microwatts of power, about enough to switch on a tiny sensor.

Although most power outputs for homes and electronics are measured in kilowatts, this suggests that with the right power source, such devices could be scaled up to target applications at or beyond the watts level, said Raymond Cao, lead author of the study and a professor in mechanical and aerospace engineering at Ohio State.

The study was recently published in the journal Optical Materials: X.

The researchers said these batteries would be used near where the nuclear waste is produced, such as in nuclear waste storage pools or nuclear systems for space and deep sea exploration – they aren’t designed for public use. Fortunately, although the gamma radiation utilized in this work is about a hundred times more penetrating than a normal X-ray or CT scan, the battery itself does not incorporate radioactive materials, meaning it is still safe to touch.

“We're harvesting something considered as waste and by nature, trying to turn it into treasure,” said Cao, who also serves as the director of Ohio State’s Nuclear Reactor Lab.

According to the study, the team’s battery may also have experienced an increase in power due to the makeup of the prototype scintillator crystal the team opted to use. They found that even the shape and size of the crystals can impact the final electrical output, as a larger volume allows it to absorb more radiation and convert that extra energy into more light. A larger surface area also helps the solar cell generate power.

“These are breakthrough results in terms of power output,” said Ibrahim Oksuz, co-author of the study and a research associate in mechanical and aerospace engineering at Ohio State. “This two-step process is still in its preliminary stages, but the next step involves generating greater watts with scale-up constructs.”

Since batteries of this type would most likely end up in environments where high levels of radiation already exist and aren't easily accessible to the public, these long-lasting devices wouldn’t pollute their surroundings. Even more significantly, they could also operate without the need for routine maintenance.

Scaling this technology up would be costly unless these batteries could be reliably manufactured, said Cao. Further research is needed to assess the batteries’ usefulness and limitations, including how long they might last once safely implemented, said Oksuz.

“The nuclear battery concept is very promising,” he said. “There's still lots of room for improvement, but I believe in the future, this approach will carve an important space for itself in both the energy production and sensors industry.”

This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. Other co-authors include Sabin Neupane and Yanfa Yan from The University of Toledo.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Education; Health/Medicine; History
KEYWORDS: battery; batterybreakthru; electricity; nuclear; power; technology
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To: indthkr

“Surprised it took scientists so long”

I wrote a college paper on this subject in 1977.


21 posted on 03/05/2025 2:51:52 PM PST by TexasGator (1I'')
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To: Nateman

“Beta radiation is Electrons. You’d think using isotopes that decayed that way would be the natural choice for batteries.”

It has been for decades. This is not ‘what is most optimum’, it is how do we do it with what we have.


22 posted on 03/05/2025 2:57:35 PM PST by TexasGator (1I'')
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To: Red Badger

As is so often the case with new technologies, you can be sure pornographers will be first in line for these scintillator crystals.


23 posted on 03/05/2025 3:02:44 PM PST by Blurb2350 (posted from my 1500-watt blow dryer)
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To: Toddsterpatriot

A little off topic, but when gamma sterilization with cobat-60 was being developed researchers experimented with insane radiation doses.

Like 500-900 kGy.

Needles to say anything that wasn’t ceramic or metal came out as a black crisp.

You couldn’t even use what survived because the packaging was destroyed.

(see my username)


24 posted on 03/05/2025 3:53:21 PM PST by packagingguy
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To: TexasGator

You joking or being honest.

If so I am impressed.

I remember writing a speech for my speech class in college how the equal rights amendment was bad for women.

Good thing it never got passed, bad thing is everything I stated would happen, still did. Today women have lost more rights than gained with this modern day trans crap and men in girls sports and bathrooms.

As I recall, I actually convinced two lesbians in my class I was right. Times were different then, lesbians still defended women’s rights.


25 posted on 03/05/2025 7:39:53 PM PST by OneVike ( Just another Christian wafor reelection to push for laws thatng to go home)
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To: GingisK

...288 nanowatts...

That is soooooooo helpful.

~~~~

By my math, it would take 5,000,000,000,000,000 of them to power a flux capacitor!


26 posted on 03/06/2025 5:23:02 AM PST by z3n (Kakistocracy)
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To: OneVike

“You joking or being honest.”

Honest. It wasn’t a research paper. Just a interesting exercise for a class.


27 posted on 03/06/2025 7:50:50 AM PST by TexasGator (1.I'')
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To: TexasGator

Awesome.

Thanks for getting back


28 posted on 03/06/2025 8:49:21 AM PST by OneVike ( Just another Christian wafor reelection to push for laws thatng to go home)
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To: Red Badger
Thanks. Keep them coming. EV's need a viable one. One of these might see production, but for now, add to the incomplete list of Battery Breakthroughs that never seem to be heard of later:
That big battery breakthrough EV lovers talk about isn't ... Torque News https://www.torquenews.com › big-battery-breakthrou... Jul 6, 2014 — ... in battery tech that EV enthusiasts always claim is coming anytime now? ... Most of the battery breakthroughs taking place in the lab ...
Why We Don't Have Battery Breakthroughs MIT Technology Review https://www.technologyreview.com › ... › Clean energy Feb 10, 2015 — Why We Don't Have Battery Breakthroughs ... notably A123 Systems, began with bold claims but failed to deliver (see “What Happened to A123?
Musk hints at new battery breakthrough on the horizon Electrek https://electrek.co › 2017/08/03 › elon-musk-hints-at-... Aug 3, 2017 —
Nanotech Energy Claims Its Graphene Lithium Battery Will ... CleanTechnica https://cleantechnica.com › 2020/05/25 › nanotech-en... May 25, 2020 — CleanTechnica readers are a suspicious lot. We have seen hundreds of announcements about revolutionary battery breakthroughs, but so far, the ..
Solid State Battery Tech Breakthrough : r/Futurology Reddit https://www.reddit.com › comments › xgmmji › solid_st... Sep 17, 2022 — Claimed to be ~2.5x more dense then current LiON tech. ... Oh I'm not at all skeptical of other fields, just battery breakthroughs.
This super energy dense battery could nearly double the ... https://www.technologyreview.com › 2020/12/08 › qu... Dec 8, 2020 — Albertus notes that there's a rich history of premature claims of battery breakthroughs, so any new ones are met with skepticism.
This New Battery Tech Will Change Electric Cars | By CNET Facebook https://www.facebook.com › ... › CNET › Videos 8:59 Now, it's still a lithium ion battery but Selah claims that one ... they think about battery breakthroughs that seem to be in the offing. Facebook · CNET · Jul 18, 2022
Promise To Reality- 5 Battery Breakthroughs That Could ... Saur Energy International https://www.saurenergy.com › ev-storage › promise-to... May 11, 2022 — Promise To Reality- 5 Battery Breakthroughs That Could Make It To Market Soon. By Junaid Shah/ Updated On Wed, May 11th, 2022.
Toyota claims battery breakthrough in potential boost for ... News YCombinator https://news.ycombinator.com › item Jul 4, 2023 — Personal transport just doesn't make the list. ... The list goes on. ... Are you implying there haven't been any battery breakthroughs?
Battery Breakthroughs Coming Quickly Climate Denial Crock of the Week https://climatecrocks.com › 2023/04/17 › battery-brea... Apr 17, 2023 — Battery Breakthroughs Coming Quickly ... a newcomer making big claims about supplying the world with cheaper, safer batteries to store clean ...
Scientists hail new battery with 4 times energy density of ... The Driven | https://thedriven.io › 2023/04/03 › scientists-hail-new-... Apr 3, 2023 — I think that battery breakthroughs are rare events, but it looks like there's loads of R&D going on. tunneslofreality • 3 months ago.
Renewables lobby overstates battery 'breakthroughs' The Australian https://www.theaustralian.com.au › ... › "News Story" Renewables lobby overstates battery 'breakthroughs' ... The renewables lobby, despite its claims of being technology-agnostic and financially imparti
Thread for new battery breakthrough PR releases https://endless-sphere.com/sphere/threads/thread-for-new-battery-breakthrough-pr-releases.57256/page-64
Next-gen seawater batteries stand 380,000 charging cycles, could replace li-ion Interesting Engineering ^ | March 24, 2025 | Kapil Kajal
Scientists design novel battery that runs on atomic waste Ohio State News ^ | February 25th 2025 | Tatyana Woodall

29 posted on 04/10/2025 3:40:34 AM PDT by daniel1212 (Turn 2 the Lord Jesus who saves damned+destitute sinners on His acct, believe, b baptized+follow HIM)
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To: Nateman
Beta radiation is Electrons. You’d think using isotopes that decayed that way would be the natural choice for batteries.

Attempting to directly harness the Beta particles (emitted electrons) would be totally impractical!

It would be tantamount to trying to remove a speck of dust from your eye using a bazooka.

Regards,

30 posted on 04/12/2025 10:01:28 AM PDT by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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