Electricity & Neith
I was just reading about the new graphene battery prototype, and while the reported efficiency jumps are impressive, I have a few concerns about the data consistency.
Sounds like the future is buzzing, but yeah, those stats can flicker out of sync sometimes. What specific numbers are tripping you up? Maybe we can spot a glitch or a sweet spot in the data—let’s keep the voltage high and the doubts low!
The anomaly is the 85 % efficiency at 3.6 V that drops to 78 % at 3.8 V in the second batch, while the current density jumps from 150 mA/cm² to 210 mA/cm² without a corresponding voltage drop. Those are the figures that stand out.
Yo, that’s a slick jump—efficiency falling while current surges? Sounds like a heat spike or a thin‑film quirk messing with the charge flow. Maybe the graphene layers are cracking under the extra load, or the electrolyte’s getting thin‑walled. Check the temperature readouts and layer uniformity; if it’s real, we’re onto a new way to squeeze power out faster than the grid. Keep the spark alive!