Previously, Kirchhoff’s Law, which has successfully described the movement of electrons since 1845, was limited in its definition. This resulted in an engineering roadblock that has prevented the adoption of supercapacitors to replace lithium-ion batteries in commercial applications.
Ankur Gupta, a chemical engineer from the University of Colorado at Boulder says his discovery of a ‘missing link’ to describe the movement of ions within supercapacitors could lead to laptops and phones that can be charged in just one minute and electric cars in less than ten.
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TLDR:
Previously, Kirchhoff’s Law, which has successfully described the movement of electrons since 1845, was limited in its definition. This resulted in an engineering roadblock that has prevented the adoption of supercapacitors to replace lithium-ion batteries in commercial applications.
Ankur Gupta, a chemical engineer from the University of Colorado at Boulder says his discovery of a ‘missing link’ to describe the movement of ions within supercapacitors could lead to laptops and phones that can be charged in just one minute and electric cars in less than ten.
original article: [https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2401656121](https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2401656121)
This seems a promising. How do you gouys think this can affect development and adoption of technological devices?