A team led by Su-Il In, a professor at South Korea's Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology, is developing an ...
Since the Fukushima disaster of 2011, Japan has struggled to meet its energy needs using renewables. Could material in solar ...
New tech could power phones, pacemakers, and more—without ever needing a charge What if your phone never needed charging? Or ...
Su-Il In is developing innovative nuclear batteries using radiocarbon, offering a long-lasting, eco-friendly alternative to ...
A small prototype nuclear battery powered by a radioactive form of carbon can safely power devices for decades – and possibly even for a user’s entire lifetime – on a single charge, scientists say.
Because it decays slowly — with a half-life of 5,730 years — a radiocarbon battery could theoretically last millennia. That’s ...
The management of breast cancer involves various therapeutic approaches. However, many current anticancer treatments indiscriminately damage both cancerous and healthy cells. In cancer treatment, ...
Researchers at Korea's Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology have created a nuclear battery that could turn ...
Lithium-ion batteries, used in consumer devices and electric vehicles, typically last hours or days between charges. However, with repeated use, they degrade and need to be charged more frequently.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA / ACCESS Newswire / March 26, 2025 / RONN, Inc (OTC PINK:RONN) As artificial intelligence (AI) and data centers voraciously consume electricity, the limitations of the current ...
Scientists have developed a prototype nuclear battery using radiocarbon that could power small devices for decades without ...