Today’s Solutions: March 19, 2026

Current owners of electric vehicles can cruise along knowing that they’re not adding any CO2 emissions into the atmosphere. While they can ride guilt-free, these joy rides can still be inconvenienced by the headache of having to wait around half an hour at a high-powered public charger, or even hours and hours with a home charger.

Quantum battery

Well, thanks to quantum technology, these wait times could shrink to about three minutes for future EV owners, according to a new paper from the Institute for Basic Science (IBS). That’s roughly the same time it takes to fill up a conventional car with a tank of gas, which could help propel mass adoption of EVs and reduce range anxiety.

Collective charging

The paper states that quantum batteries could be made to “store and release energy in a fast and efficient manner,” by relying on quantum processes such as entanglement. 

In simpler terms, this would mean that all the cells in an EV battery would be charged simultaneously in a process called “global charging protocol.” 

Right now, EV batteries cannot collectively charge their cells at once and have to charge cells one at a time, but scientists think that EV batteries could be developed to be able to charge all cells simultaneously, which would significantly speed up the charging process.

According to a press release, a traditional EV usually has a battery with 200 cells. Thus, quantum charging could lead to a “200 times speedup over classical batteries,” meaning that what once took hours, would then take mere minutes.

IBS also thinks that quantum charging could expand to other technologies such as consumer electronics.

So, EV owners of today, you may still need to wait anywhere between half an hour to 10 hours to charge your ride right now, but with quantum charging, you just might make up for the lost time in the future.

Source study: Physical Review Letters—Quantum charging advantage cannot be extensive without global operations

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Overthinking is a learned habit, and therapists say you can unlearn it

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM "Just stop overthinking" is advice that tells you nothing useful about how to actually follow it. The mind ...

Read More

A single dose of psilocybin gave smokers six times better odds of quitting th...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM A new clinical trial from Johns Hopkins University produced results that surprised even the researchers behind it. Participants who ...

Read More

Rusty social skills? 5 ways to reconnect with socialization

Now that there are more opportunities to go out and socialize, you may be experiencing some mixed emotions regarding social events. You may have ...

Read More

AI-powered blood test shows promise in early breast cancer detection

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Early detection of breast cancer dramatically increases survival rates, but identifying the disease in its earliest stages remains ...

Read More