New method to
make sodium ion - based battery cells could lead to better, cheaper batteries for the electrical grid
Not exact matches
Scientists previously thought
ions — charged particles such as
sodium or chloride, which bond to
make salt — got buried in bodies of water.
(An example of this is table salt,
made up of positively charged
sodium and negatively charged chlorine
ions).
«
Making sodium -
ion batteries that last.»
The details are complicated, but basically, in an intense workout, potassium
ions accumulate outside of working muscles,
making it harder for
sodium ions to propagate the electrical signal.