(DOE/Oak Ridge National Laboratory) 1) Getting to the finish line quickest with the least environmental impact. 2) A new instrument able to detect chemical residues from a distance. 3) BitTorrent tracker 4) Cybersecurity 5) Neutrons pierce polymers 6) Researchers are studying how to build coatings in which polymer layering will hold until drugs reach that part of the body for which they are intended.

Nature shows the way

(Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology (EMPA)) Lianas whose stabilization rings of woody cells heal spontaneously after suffering damage serve as a natural example to bionic experts of self-repairing membranes. Empa researchers have borrowed this trick from nature and developed a polymer foam surface coating with a closed cell construction which not only reduces the pressure loss after the membrane is damaged but also makes the inflatable structure more resistant and giving it a longer operational life.

Lithium batteries hold a lot of energy for their size. That’s a good thing for powering a laptop, but bad if something were to go wrong. The reaction that releases electrical energy is unstable: it releases heat, and heat causes the reaction to go more quickly… which releases more heat… which causes more energy released, and so on. If the reaction isn’t controlled, all of the energy can be released in less than a second, leading to a fire or even an explosion.

Things like discharging too quickly, overcharging, punctures, and internal short circuits can all cause a battery to fail this way. So lithium battery manufacturers add several stages of safety measures to make sure nothing goes wrong. Some have even shot holes through a fully charged battery to make sure it wouldn’t explode.

But there have been a lot of problems in recent years with counterfeit batteries, which look like “proper” batteries from the outside (Dell, Apple, Sony, whatever) but are not made with the same safety measures. If you’re shopping for a battery and you find a price that’s too good to be true, it’s probably too good to be true!

Lithium polymer batteries are about the same as lithium ion batteries as far as safety is concerned. They operate with nearly the same chemistry, but using a gel rather than a liquid. Both types have vents to prevent buildup of excess pressure.

Lithium polymer batteries