Chinese-developed nuclear battery has a 50-year lifespan — Betavolt BV100 built with Nickel-63 isotope and diamond semiconductor material
Mark Tyson2 days ago
Chinese company Betavolt has announced an atomic energy battery for consumers with a touted 50-year lifespan. The Betavolt BV100 will be the first product to launch using the firm’s new atomic battery technology, constructed using a nickel-63 isotope and diamond semiconductor material. Betavolt says its nuclear battery will target aerospace, AI devices, medical, MEMS systems, intelligent sensors, small drones, and robots – and may eventually mean manufacturers can sell smartphones that never need charging.
Buying an electronics product that can go without charging for 50 years would be amazing. But the BV100, which is in the pilot stage ahead of mass production, doesn’t offer a lot of power. This 15 x 15 x 5mm battery delivers 100 microwatts at 3 volts. The company says multiple BV100 batteries can be used together in series or parallel depending on device requirements, and Betavolt has plans to launch a 1-watt version of its atomic battery in 2025.
The new BV100 is claimed to be a disruptive product on two counts. Firstly, a safe miniature atomic battery with 50 years of maintenance-free stamina is a breakthrough. Secondly, Betavolt claims it is the only company in the world with the technology to dope large-size diamond semiconductor materials, as used by the BV100. The company is using its 4th gen diamond semiconductor material here.
In its press release, Betavolt says its atomic battery is very different from similarly described power cells developed by the US and USSR in the 1960s. It says that the old nuclear batteries were large, dangerous, hot, and expensive products. For example, some old-tech atomic batteries used Plutonium as the radioactive power source. Meanwhile, the Betavolt BV100 is claimed to be safe for consumers and won’t leak radiation even if subjected to gunshots or puncture.
Betavolt BV100 atomic battery
(Image credit: Betavolt)
The new, improved levels of safety stem from the choice of materials. Betavolt’s battery uses a nickel-63 isotope as the energy source, which decays to a stable isotope of copper. This, plus the diamond semiconductor material, helps the BV100 operate stably in environments ranging from -60 to 120 degrees Celsius, according to the firm. Betavolt boasts that this battery technology is “way ahead” of European and American academic and commercial institutions.
How does Betavolt make this battery? We’ve already mentioned the essential materials, but the above diagram provides an excellent overview. The BV100 is made by “placing a 2-micron-thick nickel-63 sheet between two diamond semiconductor converters.” This construction relies on Betavolt’s “unique single-crystal diamond semiconductor that is just 10 microns thick.”
So, the current BV100 or its 1-watt successor scheduled for next year may not sound so impressive regarding peak power output. Betavolt will be well aware of devices with a greater thirst for power and teases that it is investigating isotopes such as strontium-90, promethium-147, and deuterium to develop atomic energy batteries with higher power levels and even longer service lives – up to 230 years.
Chinese developed nuclear battery for consumer use
Chinese developed nuclear battery for consumer use
It’s said to be safe but ”Chinese” and ”nuclear” together makes me just a tad concerned.
Re: Chinese developed nuclear battery for consumer use
I saw that. And I wouldn't want to be carrying that around in my front pants pocket.
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Re: Chinese developed nuclear battery for consumer use
Well, it is a really neat way to dispose of 'atomic waste'...
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Re: Chinese developed nuclear battery for consumer use
For various degrees of neat.
Re: Chinese developed nuclear battery for consumer use
so when your cellphone explodes, you have fallout too.
Re: Chinese developed nuclear battery for consumer use
It's basically a pacemaker battery with a label on it. Nothing terribly new here except some hype by a journalist who hasn't worked out how low the power output will be!
War is less costly than servitude. The choice is always between Verdun and Dachau. - Jean Dutourd
Re: Chinese developed nuclear battery for consumer use
Shrug, this is a battery that is powered by radioactive decay. You can't get fallout from it, it isn't going to explode. On the other hand it provides very low levels of power (100 microwatts of power and has a voltage of 3V). You are NOT going to power your cell phone with that. The short version is this is a somewhat niche technology but it does have applications. Anything with very low level power requirements where replacing the battery is very difficult. (Think pacemakers, coclear implants, space missions etc.) This type of battery has been used in the past but this is the first company to have them available for commercial applications.
Sabine Hossenfelder has a good video on it.
Sabine Hossenfelder has a good video on it.