Development of Long-Life, Energy-Dense Batteries Using Alpha-Beta Emitting Isotopes/Isomers
Navy SBIR 2019.1 - Topic N191-041 ONR - Ms. Lore-Anne Ponirakis - [email protected] Opens: January 8, 2019 - Closes: February 6, 2019 (8:00 PM ET)
TECHNOLOGY
AREA(S): Nuclear Technology ACQUISITION
PROGRAM: PMS320, NAVSEA07, PEO Ships, PEO Carriers OBJECTIVE:
Develop long-life, energy-dense battery technology using alpha-beta emitting
isotopes/isomers for Directed Energy, Unmanned Underwater Vehicles (UUVs),
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), portable communication devices and satellites.
Develop energy sources that have better size, weight, and power (SWaP)
comparable or better than current military batteries. DESCRIPTION:
Present state of the art is LI batter technology. Chemical batteries are prone
to short life times and degradation from heating. Isotope/Isomer batter
technology could give longer life times without the hazards of chemical energy
storage batteries. Affordable, reliable, and compact sources of power are
needed to increase the capabilities of Naval forces. Conventional chemical
batteries and fuel cells perform adequately for many applications; however,
their longevity is limited by temperature, chemical instability, and integrity
issues. Power sources based on weak nuclear force can operate in extreme
environments such as space, arctic, and undersea, be fabricated into a
miniaturized design, and do not need to be refueled if appropriate
isotopes/isomers are utilized. Additionally, many isotopes can provide energy
densities thousands of times greater than electrochemical batteries or fossil
fuels. These isotope sources can be produced using linear accelerator
technologies. This production technique is preferred over nuclear reactor
isotope production. PHASE
I: Investigate the utility of different isotopes/isomers for energy storage
with optimal half-lives to give the best energy gain over time. Identify best
production method of obtaining isotopes/isomers and an initial design of a
device, to include simulation of its release of stored energy from the
isotope/isomer and generation and storage of power as a battery. Develop a
Phase II plan. PHASE
II: Identify key optimal isotopes/isomers for various applications. Develop a
prototype nuclear battery that has energy density greater than current
chemically stored energy systems. Conduct laboratory tests to MIL spec S9310-AQ-SAF-010
[Ref 6] and demonstrations to evaluate performance of various configurations
appropriate for different applications. PHASE
III DUAL USE APPLICATIONS: Long-term demonstration of nuclear battery
technology to power a laptop computer or other equivalent device over three to
six months is the goal of this Phase. Design packaging that takes into
consideration safety and environmental regulations defined in MIL spec
S9310-AQ-SAF-010 [Ref 6] and minimizes cost, size, and weight while matching or
exceeding current standards for chemical energy storage systems being used by
Department of Defense or commercial entities. Commercialization could include
use in cell phone, portable electronics, commercial satellites, and all
computer technologies. REFERENCES: 1.
Litz, M.S. and Merkel, G. "Controlled extraction of energy from nuclear
isomers." Proceedings of the 24th Army Science Conference, November
29-December 2, 2005. http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a433348.pdf 2.
Carroll, J. J., Litz, M. S., Netherton, K. A., Henriquez, S. L., Pereira, N.
R., Burns, D. A., and Karamian, S. A. "Nuclear Structure and Depletion of
Nuclear Isomers Using Electron Linacs." AIP Conf. Proc. 1525, 586, 2013. http://aip.scitation.org/doi/pdf/10.1063/1.4802396 3.
Chiara, C. J., Carroll, J. J., Carpenter, M. P., et al. "Isomer depletion
as experimental evidence of nuclear excitation by electron capture."
Nature 554(7691):216-218, February 2018. https://www.nature.com/articles/nature25483 4.
Langley, J., Litz, M., Russo, J., Ray Jr., W. "Design of Alpha-Voltaic
Power Source Using Americium-241 (241Am) and Diamond with a Power Density of 10
mW/cm3." ARL Technical Report, ARL-TR-8189, October 2017. http://www.arl.army.mil/arlreports/2017/ARL-TR-8189.pdf 5.
Nuclear and Radiation Studies Board; �Committee on State of Molybdenum-99
Production and Utilization and Progress Toward Eliminating Use of Highly
Enriched Uranium;� Washington (DC): National Academies Press (US); 2016 Oct 28. 6.
Commander, Naval Sea Systems Command. NAVSEA TM-S9310-AQ-SAF-010, First
Revision. �Technical Manual for Batteries, Navy Lithium Safety Program
Responsibilities and Procedures.� 19 August 2004. https://www.public.navy.mil/navsafecen/Documents/afloat/Surface/CS/Lithium_Batteries_Info/LithBattSafe.pdf KEYWORDS:
Isotope; Isomer; Nuclear Battery; Energy; Excited states; Protons; Neutrons
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