Tech News

Tiny, printable batteries promise to change the face of obnoxious greeting cards forever


Researchers at the Fraunhofer Research Institution for Electronic Nano Systems ENAS in Chemnitz led by Prof. Dr. Reinhard Baumann have unveiled tiny, printable batteries that they hope to put into production for pennies apiece. The new battery prototype is primarily composed of a zinc anode and a manganese cathode that can be screen printed and covered with a non-printed template cover. Each mercury-free battery weighs less than one gram, and can individually produce about 1.5 volts of electricity. By placing several batteries side by side, however, up to 6 volts can be generated. The institute has already produced these little power houses in the lab, and hopes to see them into production by the end of the year. The batteries have a relatively short lifespan, making them suitable for applications such as powering greeting cards. All we can say is that this battery would have made the card we got two years ago that sang "Word Up" much, much awesomer.

[Via Physorg]

Filed under:

Tiny, printable batteries promise to change the face of obnoxious greeting cards forever originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Jul 2009 16:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | 

More News
Motorola CLIQ XT hands-on
Entelligence: Aiming high or another Mylo?
Microsoft shows off XNA games running on Windows Phone, full 3D is a go
Does Android dream of DIY cushions?
Palm's webOS PDK beta adds Pixi native development, PDK'd apps will hit the Catalog mid year
Samsung NaviBot SR8845 / SR8855 vacuum cleaner hands-on
Eternal optimist Verizon calls iPad launch 'an opportunity' to sell some data plans
brite-View LinkE pipes content to four Ethernet sources over existing powerline network
Screen Grabs: the Marriage Ref trots out an iPad for all its 11 viewers
Seven45 Studios talks Power Gig details, we go hands-on with its six string guitar peripheral
Newegg selling ASUS Eee Box with Red Flag Linux pre-installed
Is Amazon hiring devs to build a robust web browser for Kindle?
A NSM Network Site.