Scholar’s Advanced Technological System

Say something extra about the lithium empty battery ~

When it comes to lithium empty batteries, it's also kind of a focused response to some of the book reviews in the previous section. I'm not interested in jumping directly to the body of the next chapter, and the chapter testimonials don't cost money ~

In fact, when I wrote about the lithium air battery, I was a little slutty, because it was a big pit in itself, bigger than the pit of the lithium sulfur battery, at least the lithium sulfur battery could see a little hope, but the lithium sky thing is still a concept, I can always guess with my ass that there must be big hands after me, and there must be people who don't know the truth to believe it.

Now that the material direction is lithium empty, it is not as popular as before, and many of the latest articles have also started with the mechanism, rarely have we seen any major breakthroughs in the material block.

Because to be honest, material science is too difficult to break through. This is the three pillars of modern science, otherwise the “magic horn” of graphene would not have been so exciting when it was first discovered.

Speaking of which, it's actually quite funny. I can't remember if it was 16 or 17 years ago. When I wrote my first book on graphene superconducting, I had a big hand spraying me as if I understood it. Then I said, "Why is graphene superconducting impossible?"

At that time, the concept of "magic horn” had not been discovered. Graphene superconducting was just a concept. I couldn't help but spray it. But now that you've stood 19 years, look back. Can you hit me in the face?

When a scientific point of view is put forward, there will definitely be both the opposite and the opposite point of view. Some people like it, there will definitely be people who don't like it. It's nothing.

But no matter how unreliable the lithium-air battery is, there are bulls like Tarascon, right? Why can't someone in reality write a science fiction instead?

Unless you're better than him, the kind of cow who throws a paper in his face at a debriefing meeting, I suggest you save it.

I can also give you a better idea if you want to show it. There's an article in Nature-Materials called "LiO2-and-Li–S-batteries-with-high-energy-storage," and when I wrote this piece, a lot of data and ideas were also referenced in this article, and then some art was done.

Yes, the article is a little too optimistic about the concept of a lithium battery, even in the eyes of an outsider like me, but he is at least a subjournal of nature. Although you may not be able to send Nature, I think since the concept of Lithium Sky is so unreliable that you can't even write science fiction, why not contact Nature and ask them to withdraw this article?

So as to avoid “misleading” more people, right?

To be honest, I write science fiction, based at best on some of the existing research, and do art processing with my own understanding, which I wrote in my testimonials.

The same thing, no matter what kind of tech line I “copied” from on the paper to achieve this lithium air battery, you expect it to work as well in real life, which is actually kind of funny.

What if I write about space elevators or something more exaggerated in the future? Nobody on the planet does that, but there's something I've even paved in the first chapter of the novel.

Science fiction is not about spreading knowledge or solving problems; it's about science and scientists.

The biggest contribution that science fiction can make to this society is to make most people happy, but also to make a small part of them interested in science, and even eventually to embark on this "thorny but interesting" path.

Our society really needs such a warrior.

Unfortunately, I don't have the ability to do scientific research. I can only read the big men's articles and listen to other big men bragging.

But if one day in the future, a reader who has seen my awkwardness, many years later, becomes an amazing scholar, then I can be very responsible for saying here that I can blow it for the rest of my life.

But if you learn so much, just to see if science fiction in an undergraduate science fiction can be achieved...

Instead of helplessness, I actually cared more about your mentor, probably white.

That's a lot of bullshit. Explain the outbreak, by the way.

The chapters have been manually reviewed over the past few days and are prone to BUG outbursts. Although outbursts can also erupt, this chapter says that people are always swallowed. It is better to wait for this wind to blow through before it erupts ~

June 1st, I'm sure of it!

At the same time, I hope that by then, ladies and gentlemen, for all the consecutive outbreaks I've had this month, I'll have a monthly voucher in my back. The higher the ranking of the monthly ticket list, the more impetus we have.