DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adq7430 ISSN: 2375-2548

The multifunctional use of an aqueous battery for a high capacity jellyfish robot

Xu Liu, Shuo Jin, Yiqi Shao, Sofia Kuperman, Autumn Pratt, Duhan Zhang, Jacqueline Lo, Yong Lak Joo, Amir D. Gat, Lynden A. Archer, Robert F. Shepherd

The batteries that power untethered underwater vehicles (UUVs) serve a single purpose: to provide energy to electronics and motors; the more energy required, the bigger the robot must be to accommodate space for more energy storage. By choosing batteries composed primarily of liquid media [e.g., redox flow batteries (RFBs)], the increased weight can be better distributed for improved capacity with reduced inertial moment. Here, we formed an RFB into the shape of a jellyfish, using two redox chemistries and architectures: (i) a secondary ZnBr 2 battery and (ii) a hybrid primary/secondary ZnI 2 battery. A UUV was able to be powered solely by RFBs with increased volumetric ( Q ~ 11 ampere-hours per liter) and areal (108 milliampere-hours per square centimeter) energy density, resulting in a long operational lifetime ( T ~ 1.5 hours) for UUVs composed of primarily electrochemically energy-dense liquid (~90% of the robot’s weight).

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