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CAP-XX Demonstrates Surface Mountable Supercapacitors
Meets Industry Requests for Supercapacitors Capable of Mass Assembly
| Source: CAP-XX
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA--(Marketwire - June 15, 2009) - CAP-XX Limited (LSE : CPX ), developer of
thin-form supercapacitors which deliver burst and back-up power in
space-constrained electronic devices, has demonstrated prototypes of
surface-mountable supercapacitors at its Lane Cove manufacturing facility
in Australia. The company developed the SMT (surface-mount
technology) devices to meet customer requests for supercapacitors capable
of mass production assembly using standard reflow soldering techniques.
CAP-XX engineers sent several working prototypes of the SMT supercapacitors
though a reflow oven at 260 degrees C. Before reflow, the thin, prismatic
prototypes had ESRs (equivalent-series resistance) of 60 and 100 milliohms,
capacitances of 1.0 and 0.5 Farads, and voltage ratings of 2.75 and
5.5V, respectively. The process had only minimal impact on performance,
changing the ESR and capacitance by less than 10%.
"A high-power, surface-mountable supercapacitor with the CAP-XX
characteristics of a thin, small form factor has been the holy grail for
the portable electronics industry, particularly mobile handsets," said
Anthony Kongats, CAP-XX CEO. "The preservation of performance demonstrated
in this trial meets the requirements of these customer groups."
CAP-XX is developing SMT devices to facilitate the adoption of
supercapacitor-enabled power architectures in high-end feature phones and
other consumer electronics devices. Current CAP-XX devices are manually
soldered onto the PCB (printed-circuit board).
"Supercapacitors will soon become a key component in mobile computing
products," said Craig Mathias, a principal with Farpoint Group, an advisory
firm specializing in wireless networking and mobile computing. "A
supercapacitor handles the large instantaneous power demands of flash
photos, audio, video, and wireless transmissions, maximizing battery life
and enabling the use of smaller batteries. Given ever-increasing demands on
battery power from higher clock rates and greater functionality, the
supercapacitor is about to take center stage in mobile-power applications."
Mathias continued, "CAP-XX's SMT capability is an impressive development
from a leader in the supercapacitor space."
CAP-XX supercapacitors store charge on nanoporous carbon electrodes on
aluminum foil, arranged in multiple layers and connected in parallel to
minimize resistance and maximize capacitance. This packs the highest energy
and power densities possible into thin (0.9 to 3.8mm), prismatic packages.
The company did not disclose expected availability for its SMT devices.
About CAP-XX:
Sydney-based CAP-XX is listed on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) in
London. For more information, visit http://www.cap-xx.com or email
sales@cap-xx.com.
Note: Photographs of current devices are available:
http://www.cap-xx.com/news/photogallery.htm