arstechnica.com — Part of the problem with designing flexible batteries and supercapacitors has always been the necessity of layering such devices. Typically, two electrode layers sandwich two charge-holding layers, with an insulating layer in the middle of it all. As the layers build up, flexibility goes out the window.
Aug 13, 2007 View in Crawl 4
getliquifiedAug 14, 2007
FLAWLESS execution. Dugg up!
icsuAug 14, 2007
we=humans
dsigismundAug 14, 2007
I see potential for some interesting hearing aid designs off battery- I show some pictures and ideas at <a class="user" href="http://hearinginformed.com/2007/08/14/paper-thin-flexible-biodegradable-battery-developed/">http://hearinginformed.com/2007/08/14/paper-thin-flexible-biodegradable-battery-developed/</a>
computergodAug 14, 2007
You forgot about voltage.
spootmonkeyAug 14, 2007
yeah RPI!!! maybe people will know my school now when I tell them where I go.
bdhughesAug 15, 2007
maybe SCO should claim the technology is theirs and sue the inventors. if they don't m$ will!/jokingseriously though, whatever company hits the 'super battery' paradigm (cheap, thin, light, long-lasting) is going to make billions. where is a crystal ball when ya need one!