Rachid Al-Yazami, a Moroccan scientist specializing in lithium batteries, intends to patent a charger that takes only 5 minutes to charge the battery, according to Anadolu Agency.

Scientist Rashid Al-Yazami told SNRTnews that the recent experiments he led with his team resulted in charging the lithium battery in 5 minutes, and this time period is 17% less than the previous time recorded by the same scientist, before Almost a year, when it reached the duration of 6 minutes.

Al-Yazmi explained that the new technology relies on managing the electric current in the battery instead of focusing on its electrical pressure, which is the technology called "non-linear voltage".

Al-Yazmi said that the traditional method of charging batteries requires filling from 20% to 80% for a period of time not less than half an hour. As for the recent experiments that he led with his stable team in Singapore, the new technology can charge a battery by 100%, in a time not exceeding 15 minutes. .

Rachid El-Yazmi: The new charging technology is suitable for all lithium batteries (Moroccan Press)

Breaking the previous record

He added that the recent research broke the charging record, after the experiments succeeded in charging a lithium battery in 5 minutes. Al-Yazami confirmed that the new charging technology is suitable for all lithium batteries, from smartphone batteries to Tesla car batteries.

And according to the Moroccan TV website - according to what Anatolia reported - the scientific research of Lasmi is not limited to breaking the record for the time required to charge a lithium battery, but rather he is leading a scientific project at Yan Yang University that focuses on replacing lithium with fluorine, given that it is more abundant and less cost in extraction.

Al-Yazami was born in the city of Fez (north) in 1953, where he received his primary and secondary education, and began his university life at Mohammed V University in the capital, Rabat, before leaving in 1972 for France, to start a practical journey that was a prelude to the brightness of the Moroccan inventor's star in the world.