Sea water rope batteries
Abstract
This research demonstrated the feasibility of supplying approximately 1 watt of electrical power for one year on the sea bed with a novel battery, the rope battery. The proposed battery would look very much like a small diameter wire rope, possibly hundreds of feet long. This unusual shape permits the rope battery to take full advantage of the vastness of the ocean floor and permits at great pressure the steady diffusion of reaction products away from the battery itself. A sea water battery is described consisting of an inner bundle of coated wires which slowly corrode and an outer layer of fine wires which simultaneously provides strength, armor and surface area for slow hydrogen evolution. Two variations are examined. The fuse utilizes magnesium wires and burns slowly from the end. The rope utilizes lithium-zinc alloys and is slowly consumed along its entire length.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- May 1984
- Bibcode:
- 1984STIN...8510275W
- Keywords:
-
- Cables (Ropes);
- Corrosion;
- Diffusion;
- Electric Batteries;
- Lithium Alloys;
- Sea Water;
- Zinc Alloys;
- Chemical Reactions;
- Coatings;
- Magnesium;
- Ocean Bottom;
- Electronics and Electrical Engineering