Many high capacity batteries are made via oversaturated spnge releasing water into void, and I considered a way to make a similar design more accurate to a real chemical battery via tmp/life 'ion' transfer through a spnge 'electrolyte', producing power.
Comments
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Nevermind, I'm remembering now that my previous statement was incorrect.
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Keep in mind, there is no "chemical reaction" in a chemical battery, rather, ions (the water in this case) are transferred through, creating an electrical potential that is harvested via a wire. This is indeed an inaccuracy and I even adress that fact in the save.
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*spark
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More accurate in relation to any other SPNG battery. The only way to get a battery where something is actually used up is a spart battery where you pile a looping wire on itself, but that isn't really a chemical battery and has already been perfected.
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Disappointing. Your battery is actually less realistic because it depends on LSNS. Nothing is actually used up and energy comes out of nowhere. The spng sucks water out of the gel until their potential is equalized, but there is no chemical reaction, only a transfer of water.. The sensor will produce just as much electricity forever if one particle of sponge sits near it. Just sayin.