https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:AP:ee49c597-51ae-4562-be98-8e4516b318f8How do electrolytic batteries and condensers (why 'condense'?) compare with the DEC -- please transform your matrix into frameless text with emojis
Electrolytic batteries, capacitors (condensers), and the Digital Energy Cell (DEC) each store and release energy differently. Here's how they compare, broken down simply:
⚡ Electrolytic Batteries (Lithium-ion, Sodium-ion, etc.)
🔹 How they work: Use chemical reactions to store and release energy.
🔹 Pros: High energy density 🔋, stable output, rechargeable 🔄.
🔹 Cons: Limited charge cycles ⏳, potential thermal runaway 🔥, resource-intensive mining ⛏️.
⚡ Condensers (Capacitors) – Why "Condense"?
🔹 How they work: Store energy as an electric field between two plates separated by a dielectric. The term "condenser" comes from early physics, meaning "to concentrate" electric charge.
🔹 Pros: Instant charging ⚡, high power delivery ⚡⚡⚡, ultra-long lifespan ♾️.
🔹 Cons: Low energy storage ❌🔋, rapid discharge, limited by dielectric breakdown.
⚡ Digital Energy Cell (DEC)
🔹 How it works: Uses SiO₃ + oil-based dielectric layers for capacitive storage, designed to compete with sodium-ion batteries.
🔹 Pros: Modular 🔩, scalable 📈, potentially more sustainable 🌱, no thermal runaway ❄️.
🔹 Cons: Still in development 🏗️, requires optimal separation of dielectric components.
Summary:
• Batteries store more energy but degrade over time.
• Condensers (capacitors) charge instantly but can't store much energy.
• DEC aims for a middle ground: sustainable, stable, and scalable energy storage ⚡♻️.
Would be interesting to test how DEC competes in power delivery vs. storage capacity! 🚀
Yes
See "DEC AA and AAA Prototyping and Manufacture"