How Batteries Power the Modern World - with Paul Shearing

Paul Shearing

From the battery to the electric motor (which celebrates its 200 year anniversary in 2021), breakthroughs made in previous centuries continue to inform our technology today.

00:57:42

From the battery to the electric motor (which celebrates its 200 year anniversary in 2021), breakthroughs made in previous centuries continue to inform our technology today.
Watch the Q&A: https://youtu.be/jJ8lz2PbJN8

This video is generously supported by The Faraday Institution.

Today, we take the easy availability of electric power for granted. From the phone in our pocket to the car charging in our garage, the modern world would be unthinkable without electricity and the batteries we rely on to deliver portable power.

But the technology we rely on has its roots in the incredible work of scientists over the past 300 years. From the battery to the electric motor (which celebrates its 200 year anniversary in 2021), breakthroughs made in previous centuries continue to inform our technology today.

Paul Shearing's research interests are in electrochemical engineering – the study and design of electrochemical processes in devices including fuel cells, batteries and electrochemical reactors. He is involved in a wide range of projects which include understanding and development of batteries, fuel cells and other electrochemical processes. Paul holds the Royal Academy of Engineering Chair in Emerging Battery Technologies, and leads the LiSTAR project under the auspices of the Faraday Institution.

He has published more than 240 peer reviewed papers in this area over the past 5 years, and has delivered over 100 invited talks on five continents. Paul's research makes extensive use of synchrotron radiation and he has successfully conducted experiments at most of the world's major light sources.

This talk was filmed on 13 October 2021.

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