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Scientists and engineers produce world's first carbon-14 diamond battery with potential lifespan of thousands of years
This new type of battery has the potential to power devices for thousands of years, making it an incredibly long-lasting energy source. The battery leverages the radioactive isotope, carbon-14, known for its use in radiocarbon dating, to produce a diamond battery.
The batteries could power active radio frequency (RF) tags where there is a need to identify and track devices either on earth or in space, such as spacecraft or payloads, for decades at a time, thus reducing costs and extending operational lifespan. UKAEA’s approach is to hold this hot plasma using strong magnets in a ring-shaped machine called a ‘tokamak’, and then to harness this heat to produce electricity in a similar way to existing power stations. Members of the Diamond Battery team, including Neil Fox, Professor of Materials for Energy at the University of Bristol (far left), with the Plasma Deposition Rig at UKAEA.
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