- Quantum battery expansion reduces charging time and increases stored energy
- Collective molecular interactions accelerate energy transfer beyond the classical limits of conventional batteries.
- The energy density increases as the number of participating molecules increases.
Conventional battery design follows a predictable rule in which an increase in size leads to longer charging times and proportional gains in capacity.
This emerging quantum battery breaks that assumption, not by a small margin, but in a way that seems fundamentally inconsistent with classical thermodynamics.
In a study published in Light: science and applicationsResearchers at CSIRO and RMIT University describe this behavior as super-extensive, where performance improves faster than the system grows.
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When bigger means faster, not slower
“That’s why your mobile phone takes about 30 minutes to charge and your electric car takes all night to charge,” said lead researcher Dr James Quach of CSIRO, Australia’s national science agency.
“Quantum batteries have this really peculiar property that the bigger they are, the less time they take to charge.”
This result arises from collective quantum interactions, where individual components no longer behave independently but act in a coordinated manner that amplifies the efficiency of energy transfer.
The device is based on a microcavity structure that confines light and strongly couples it with organic molecules such as copper phthalocyanine. When light enters this confined environment, it forms hybrid states known as polaritons.
This interaction is not simply additive. As more molecules are introduced, the coupling strength increases collectively rather than linearly.
The result is more efficient energy absorption as the number of participating molecules increases. Expanding the battery does not slow it down, but rather speeds up charging.
Unlike previous prototypes, this design integrates layers that allow energy to be extracted as an electrical output, allowing a complete charge and discharge cycle.
Experimental measurements show that charging occurs on femtosecond time scales: quadrillion seconds.
More importantly, the charging time decreases as the number of molecules increases, while the stored energy and maximum power increase, defying classical expectations, where the energy density generally remains constant regardless of the size of the system.
Instead, energy density increases along with faster charging, reinforcing the role of collective quantum effects.
After charging, the energy goes into a metastable state instead of immediately dissipating.
Excited singlet states are converted to triplet states by crossing between systems, extending the lifetime of the stored energy.
These states persist for nanoseconds: brief, but significantly longer than the initial excitation phase.
The system also enables energy extraction through integrated charge transport layers, converting stored energy into electrical current.
Power output increases more than proportionally with system size, reflecting the same super-extensive scaling.
While efficiency gains remain limited, the improved conversion of photons to charges suggests that the microcavity design improves performance.
This prototype demonstrates a complete operational cycle within a single quantum device.
However, the stored energy remains extremely small (only a few billion electron volts), which is insufficient for practical applications.
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