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iShares 10-20 Year Treasury Bond ETF T.TLH


Primary Symbol: TLH

The fund seeks to track the investment results of an index composed of U.S. Treasury bonds with remaining maturities between ten and twenty years. The fund seeks to track the investment results of the ICE U.S. Treasury 10-20 Year Bond Index (the Underlying Index), which measures the performance of public obligations of the U.S. Treasury that have a remaining maturity of greater than or equal to ten years and less than twenty years. As of February 28, 2021, there were 18 issues in the Underlying Index.


ARCA:TLH - Post by User

Post by barneyj44on Sep 27, 2011 10:31pm
421 Views
Post# 19091411

Lithium news: our day will come

Lithium news: our day will come
Development boosts lithium-ion battery power by 8-fold
By Chris Jablonski | September 25, 2011, 11:09am PDT
Summary: Researchers at Berkeley have developed a new kind of anode polymer can absorb eight times the lithium of current designs.

Lithium-ion batteries are the most common type of rechargeable battery. They are found in laptops, smartphones, and increasingly, in electric cars and smart grids.
Although there are many advantages to lithium ion batteries–they maintain full capacity even after a partial recharge and are considered to be more environmentally safe than other battery technologies–their storage capacity can be improved.
A team of scientists at Berkeley Lab have designed a new kind of anode that can absorb eight times the lithium of current designs, and has maintained its greatly increased energy capacity after over a year of testing and many hundreds of charge-discharge cycles.
“Most of today’s lithium-ion batteries have anodes made of graphite, which is electrically conducting and expands only modestly when housing the ions between its graphene layers. Silicon can store 10 times more – it has by far the highest capacity among lithium-ion storage materials – but it swells to more than three times its volume when fully charged, ” said Gao Liu of Berkeley Lab’s Environmental Energy Technologies Division (EETD).
The swelling quickly breaks the electrical contacts in the anode, so the researchers concentrated on finding other ways to use silicon while maintaining anode conductivity. Through a combination of synthesis, spectroscopy and simulation, the team tailored a polymer that conducts electricity and binds closely to lithium-storing silicon particles, even as they expand to more than three times their volume during charging and then shrink again during discharge.
The new anodes are made from low-cost materials, compatible with standard lithium-battery manufacturing technologies.
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