January 21, 2014
Journal Article

Micro-battery Development for Juvenile Salmon Acoustic Telemetry System Applications

Abstract

The Juvenile Salmon Acoustic Telemetry System (JSATS) project supported by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Portland District, has yielded the smallest acoustic fish tag transmitter commercially available to date. In order to study even smaller fish populations and make the transmitter injectable by needles, the JSATS acoustic micro transmitter needs to be further downsized. This study focuses on the optimization of microbattery design based on Li/CFx chemistry. Through appropriate modifications, a steady high-rate pulse current with desirable life time has been achieved while the weight and volume of the battery is largely reduced. The impedance variation in as-designed microbatteries is systematically compared with that of currently used watch batteries in JSATS with an attempt to understand the intrinsic factors that control the performances of microbatteries under the real testing environments.

Revised: February 26, 2020 | Published: January 21, 2014

Citation

Chen H., S.S. Cartmell, Q. Wang, T.J. Lozano, Z. Deng, H. Li, and X. Chen, et al. 2014. Micro-battery Development for Juvenile Salmon Acoustic Telemetry System Applications. Scientific Reports 4. PNNL-SA-84994. doi:10.1038/srep03790