
18650 Li-Ion Rechargeable Lithium Ion Battery 3.7v 1300mah 1500mah 2200mah From Manufactures In China
18650 Li-Ion Rechargeable Lithium Ion Battery 3.7v 1300mah 1500mah 2200mah From Manufactures In China
Battery capacity: | 1500mah |
Battery Cell Type: | Lithium Battery |
Recycling life: | ≥600 times |
Material: | plastic |
Colours available: | Blue |
Size: | 68.85*19mm |
Weight: | 50G |
Nominal voltage: | 3.7V |
Standard Charge: | CC/CV,0.2C5A, 4.20V |
Standard Discharge: | CC,0.2C5A, 3.00V |
Warranty: | 1 year |
Operating temperature: | Charging: 0℃~45℃
Discharging:-20℃~60℃ |
Storage temperature: | -5℃~35℃ |
Storage Humidity: | ≤75% RH |
Appearance: | Without scratch, distortion, contamination and leakage |
“This battery literally inhales and exhales air, but it doesn’t exhale carbon dioxide, like humans — it exhales oxygen,” says Yet-Ming Chiang, the Kyocera Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at MIT and co-author of a paper describing the battery. The research appears today in the journal Joule.
The battery’s total chemical cost — the combined price of the cathode, anode, and electrolyte materials — is about 1/30th the cost of competing batteries, such as lithium-ion batteries. Scaled-up systems could be used to store electricity from wind or solar power, for multiple days to entire seasons, for about $20 to $30 per kilowatt hour.
Co-authors with Chiang on the paper are: first author Zheng Li, who was a postdoc at MIT during the research and is now a professor at Virginia Tech; Fikile R. Brushett, the Raymond A. and Helen E. St. Laurent Career Development Professor of Chemical Engineering; research scientist Liang Su; graduate students Menghsuan Pan and Kai Xiang; and undergraduate students Andres Badel, Joseph M. Valle, and Stephanie L. Eiler.