no info on NiMH; bad intro
by
mike_in_nm
11/02/2009, 2:05 PM #
I suppose this is a decent enough story. Not much new here, but
interesting to the uninformed. There is one error of omission that I
think needs to be corrected. Its true that NiCd batteries are now rare.
This is because they were replaced by NiMH batteries, which avoid the use of toxic
cadmium. NiMH batteries are still pretty common because they are
available in AAA and AA sizes and can be used to replace non-rechargeable
alkaline batteries in small electronic devices. NiMH suffer from the same
type of "memory effect" as NiCd batteries, however.
This intro to this piece is terrible. You say that "Batteries are an old-school technology" and "What we know
about batteries today is pretty much what we knew about batteries back
when ENIAC
was invented." This is not true. Those lithium-ion batteries you
spend most of the article discussing are relatively new technology. If we were all using lead-acid batteries to power our laptops, then I would agree with you. Battery technology is the subject of much high tech research and constant improvements are being made.
Its true that battery development hasn't followed Moore's Law. But, I don't know what that is supposed to mean. Moore's law only applies to digital electronics, not everything on the planet. Automotive development and the treatment of cancer haven't followed Moore's Law either. So, what's your point? The link you give to explain why batteries don't follow this law is misleading. It says: "This is because battery technology is a prisoner
of physics, the periodic table, manufacturing technology and economics." What technology isn't a prisoner of all three of these things?
How about some more research before writing an article?