01-16-2026, 11:26 PM
A student “playing around” may have cracked the biggest battery problem ever
In 2015, a PhD student at UC Irvine, Mya Le Thai, got tired of batteries dying. Not just phone batteries, but the fact that all batteries slowly break down and become toxic waste.
While researching capacitors, she tried something outside her plan. She took ultra-thin gold nanowires, coated them with manganese dioxide, then wrapped them in a flexible gel similar to Plexiglas. She was just experimenting.
Then she started testing.
Normal lithium batteries degrade after 300–500 charge cycles. Good ones last maybe 5,000.
Thai’s battery kept going.
10,000 cycles.
50,000 cycles.
100,000 cycles.
200,000 cycles.
It still worked like new.
Her supervisor didn’t believe it at first. Batteries are supposed to fail. The materials crack as they expand and shrink during charging. That is why batteries die.
The gel coating solved that. It let the nanowires flex without breaking. No cracks. No degradation.
If this were a phone battery, you could charge it every day for over 500 years before it weakened.
The implications are huge:
-Massive reduction in toxic battery waste
-Batteries that outlast phones, laptops, cars, and even medical implants
-Long-life energy storage for solar and power grids
So why isn’t this in your phone yet?
Because lab breakthroughs are not products. Gold nanowires are expensive. Manufacturing at scale is hard. Energy density is lower than lithium-ion. Existing factories are built for old battery tech. These are engineering and cost problems, not failures of the idea.
The research was published in 2016 and is still influencing battery science today, especially for grid storage and long-life systems where durability matters more than size.
The key point is this: Mya Le Thai proved battery degradation is not inevitable. A problem accepted for over a century was shown to be solvable.
Her battery isn’t on the market yet.
But the door is open.
We now know batteries don’t have to die in a few years. They can last decades… even centuries.
And that changes everything.
In 2015, a PhD student at UC Irvine, Mya Le Thai, got tired of batteries dying. Not just phone batteries, but the fact that all batteries slowly break down and become toxic waste.
While researching capacitors, she tried something outside her plan. She took ultra-thin gold nanowires, coated them with manganese dioxide, then wrapped them in a flexible gel similar to Plexiglas. She was just experimenting.
Then she started testing.
Normal lithium batteries degrade after 300–500 charge cycles. Good ones last maybe 5,000.
Thai’s battery kept going.
10,000 cycles.
50,000 cycles.
100,000 cycles.
200,000 cycles.
It still worked like new.
Her supervisor didn’t believe it at first. Batteries are supposed to fail. The materials crack as they expand and shrink during charging. That is why batteries die.
The gel coating solved that. It let the nanowires flex without breaking. No cracks. No degradation.
If this were a phone battery, you could charge it every day for over 500 years before it weakened.
The implications are huge:
-Massive reduction in toxic battery waste
-Batteries that outlast phones, laptops, cars, and even medical implants
-Long-life energy storage for solar and power grids
So why isn’t this in your phone yet?
Because lab breakthroughs are not products. Gold nanowires are expensive. Manufacturing at scale is hard. Energy density is lower than lithium-ion. Existing factories are built for old battery tech. These are engineering and cost problems, not failures of the idea.
The research was published in 2016 and is still influencing battery science today, especially for grid storage and long-life systems where durability matters more than size.
The key point is this: Mya Le Thai proved battery degradation is not inevitable. A problem accepted for over a century was shown to be solvable.
Her battery isn’t on the market yet.
But the door is open.
We now know batteries don’t have to die in a few years. They can last decades… even centuries.
And that changes everything.


