From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The terms atomic battery, nuclear battery and radioisotope
battery are used to describe a device which uses the charged particle
emissions from a radioactive
isotope to directly generate electricity.
Devices for converting natural radioactive decay directly into electricity
are nothing new. Nuclear battery technology began in 1913, when Henry Moseley first
demonstrated the Beta Cell. The field received considerable research attention
for applications requiring long-life power sources for space needs during the
50s and 60s. Over the years many types and methods have been developed. The
scientific principles are well known, but modern nano-scale technology and new
wide bandgap semiconductors have created new devices and
interesting material properties not previously available.
Batteries using the energy of radioisotope decay to provide long-lived power
(10-20 year) are being developed internationally. Conversion techniques can be
grouped into two types: thermal and non-thermal. The thermal converters (whose
output power is a function of a temperature differential) include thermoelectric and thermionic generators. The
non-thermal converters (whose output power is not a function of a temperature
difference) extract a fraction of the incident energy as it is being degraded
into heat rather than using thermal energy to run electrons in a cycle. Atomic
batteries usually have an efficiency of 0.1–5%.
Mechanisms of Energy Production
Thermal
Thermionic converter
-
A thermionic converter, consists of a hot electrode which thermionically
emits electrons over a space charge barrier to a cooler electrode, producing a
useful power output. Cesium vapor is
used to optimize the electrode work functions and provide an ion supply (by
surface contact ionization) to neutralize the electron space charge.
Radioisotopic Thermoelectric Generator
-
A thermoelectric converter" connects thermocouples in series. Each thermocouple is
formed by the junction of two dissimilar materials, one of which is heated and
the other cooled. Metal thermocouples have low thermal-to-electrical efficiency.
However, the carrier density and charge can be adjusted in semiconductor
materials such as bismuth telluride and silicon germanium to achieve much higher
conversion efficiencies.
Thermophotovoltaic cells
-
Thermophotovoltaic cells work by the same principles as a photovoltaic cell,
except that they convert infrared
light (rather than visible light) emitted by a hot surface, into electricity.
Thermophotovoltaic cells have an efficiency slightly higher than thermoelectric
couplers and can be overlaid on thermoelectric couples, potentially doubling
efficiency. The University of Houston TPV Radioisotope
Power Conversion Technology development effort is aming at combining
thermophotovoltaic cell concurrently with thermocouples to provide a 3 to 4-fold improvement
in system efficiency over current thermoelectric radioisotope generators.
Alkali-metal thermal to electric converter
-
The alkali-metal thermal to electric converter (AMTEC) is an electrochemical system
which is based on the electrolyte used in the sodium-sulfur
battery, sodium beta-alumina. The device is a sodium concentration cell which uses a ceramic, polycrystalline β-alumina solid electrolyte
(BASE), as a separator between a high pressure region containing sodium vapor at
900 - 1300 K and a low pressure region containing a condenser for liquid sodium
at 400 - 700 K. Efficiency of AMTEC cells has reached 16% in the laboratory and
is predicted to approach 20%.
Non-thermal converters
Non-thermal converters extract a fraction of the nuclear energy as it is being degraded into
heat. Their outputs are not functions of temperature differences as are
thermoelectric and thermionic converters. Non-thermal generators can be grouped
into three classes.
Direct charging generators
In the first type, the primary generators consists of a capacitor which is charged by the current of charged
particles from a radioactive layer deposited on one of the electrodes. Spacing
can be either vacuum or dielectric. Negatively charged beta particles or
positively charged alpha
particles, positrons or fission fragments may
be utilized. Although this form of nuclear-electric generator dates back to
1913, few applications have been found in the past for the extremely low
currents and inconveniently high voltages provided by direct charging
generators.
English physicist H.G.J. Moseley constructed the first of these. Moseley’s
apparatus consisted of a glass globe silvered on the inside with a radium emmiter mounted on
the tip of a wire at the center. The charged particles from the radium created a flow of electricity as they moved
quickly from the radium to the inside surface of the sphere. As late as 1945 the
Moseley model guided other efforts to build experimental batteries generating
electricity from the emissions of radioactive elements.
Betavoltaics
-
In May 2005, a group including
researchers from the University of Rochester and from the University of
Toronto announced [1] a small battery powered by
the beta-particle-emitting decay of tritium and positioned the product as suitable for pacemakers or low-current electrical
household devices. The device gathers energy from the beta-particles that pass
through a silicon diode, in a manner analogous to photovoltaic cells. This technique is called betavoltaics and has the
potential to radically increase atomic battery efficiency and energy production
densities.
Optoelectric
-
An optolectric nuclear battery has also been proposed by researchers of the
Kurchatov
Institute in Moscow. A beta-emitter
(such as technetium-99) would
stimulate an excimer mixture, and the
light would power a photocell.
The battery would consist of an excimer mixture of argon/xenon in a
pressure vessel with an internal mirrored surface, finely-divided Tc-99, and an
intermittent ultrasonic stirrer,
illuminating a photocell with a bandgap tuned for the excimer. If the
pressure-vessel is carbon
fiber/epoxy, the weight to power
ratio is said to be comparable to an air-breathing engine with fuel tanks.
The advantage of this design is that precision electrode assemblies are not
needed, and most beta particles escape the finely-divided bulk material to
contribute to the battery's net power.
Reciprocating Electromechanical Atomic Batteries
-
Electromechanical atomic batteries use the build up of charge between two
plates to pull one bendable plate towards the other, until the two plates touch,
discharge, equalizing the electrostatic buildup, and spring back. The mechanical
motion produced can be used to produce electricity through flexing of a piezoelectric material or
through a linear generator. Milliwatts of power are produced in pulses depending
on the charge rate, in some systems with cycles up to radio frequency regions. [2]
Radioisotopes Used
Atomic batteries use radioisotopes that produce low energy beta particles or
sometimes alpha particles of varying energies. Low energy beta particles are
needed to prevent the production of high energy penetrating Bremsstrahlung radiation
that would require heavy shielding. Radioisotopes such as tritium, nickel-63, promethium-147, and technetium-99 have been tested. Plutonium-238, curium-242, curium-244 and strontium-90 have been used.
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