Researchers at Debrecen University have developed a prototype for a rechargeable zinc-air battery which uses cellulose derivatives and biodegradable materials, the university said. The battery is free of heavy metals and all of the used materials are easily available and non-toxic, they said.
The development project is currently in the stage of finding ways to increase the battery’s performance while preserving its positive characteristics, associate professor Dr Tibor Nagy said in the statement. Additionally, work is being done to connect the cells in order to boost the battery’s voltage output. The researchers have published details of their findings in the Journal of Energy Storage.
Read also:
- The best Hungarian universities, part 5 – University of Debrecen – check out our article HERE
- Debrecen University stripped Putin of his honorary citizen title? – Details in THIS article
If you would like to support the work of the Daily News Hungary staff and independent journalism,
please make a donation here
please make a donation here
Hot news
Tourists and immigrants revitalise Budapest’s iconic region as 1/5th of shops change
Top Hungary news: Festive trains, Wizz passengers stuck in Belgium, minimum wage increase, lego tram — 21 November, 2024
Hungary stands firm on Russian energy: FM Szijjártó defends sovereignty amid EU criticism
Wizz Air flight delayed for 18 hours: Passengers stuck in Brussels airport
Official: Minimum wage in Hungary to rise in 2025
Hop on a festive train to Vienna and Zagreb’s Christmas markets with MÁV!
1 Comment
Congratulations!!
Now the challenge is not to sell the patent and manufacturing rights to foreign entities. The people of Hungary have a stake in the battery; universities are partly supported from by general revenues.
This should excite the climate extremists.