http://arstechnica.com/science/news/...10-seconds.ars
Synopsis: the problem with Lithium Ion technology batteries is the long charge-up time. This is because the ions which carry the charge into the battery's salt-crystal grains aren't really that mobile and so can't move to the few "tunnel" entrances on the battery's surface that take them inside its matrix where they can pass along their charge. But by coating the crystal matrix elements with a material that acts like an ion expressway and enables the ions to move to and into these entrance points freely, the little electric dudes can penetrate and recharge the battery in a flash. Further, the resulting architecture results in a battery that doesn't lose its ability to hold a charge over time.
This is really important because it doesn't require any additional exotic materials and manufacturing can turn the corner on this new technology quite quickly, like within a couple years.
Came across this on another forum I visit and the technology behind this looks very promising. However, going through the thread and the comments from the egg heads, there is a problem. A 1 wht Cell/Mobile phone could recharge in 10 seconds, but it would require 360 W battery. To put into perspective, those of you that own XBOX 360 are aware of that huge grey adaptor that it has. That is only 160 W. Now imagine a charger that is over twice that size to charge your phone. Now imagine a battery big enough to power a car, and there in lies the impracticality. Also there is talk that one car battery would only last 100 km before needing to be recharged. Is that an inconveniance, or would that go a long way to helping with driver fatigue? What if your car runs out of juice between recharging stations, and so on.
However, if this technology could be shrunk, made more practical, the cost behind it is quite cheap:
I crunched the numbers a bit just to see how likely a gas station architecture could be with this. Assuming 180 kW charging for 5 minutes (for a total of 15 kWh) that's (for me) 5.5 NOK or about 0.8 USD's worth of mains electricity. If that gives you 100 miles that's less than 0.9 cents/mile to a CAFE standard compliant car's 6+ cents/mile.
Definitely a discovery with potential here. (I can't take credit for this, but if true then the potential behind this is huge)
At the moment, this is look far, far better than most of the other options out there at the moment. And something needs to be done soon, because I reckon in about 10 years time, oil and gas is going to become quite a rare/expensive commodity.