"Millennium Source" series carbon-14 nuclear battery by China
The "Millennium Source, Nuclear Energy Innovation" independent and controllable carbon-14 nuclear battery full-chain technology achievement release conference was held in Lanzhou, co-hosted by Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou Municipal Science and Technology Bureau, and Lanzhou Anning District People's Government, and organized by Gansu Zhulong Technology Co., Ltd. and Lanzhou Anning District Science and Technology Bureau. The conference officially unveiled two core scientific research achievements: the new independent brand "Millennium Source Tianshu" carbon-14 nuclear battery and the "Millennium Source Nengshu" silicon carbide energy converter. Cross-sector team says device, which marks significant step in long-life power sources, was developed without foreign tech or parts.
Chinese researchers have developed a new-generation nuclear battery that far surpasses its predecessor and marks a major step in long-life power sources. The Qianjiyuan Tianshu battery is a major upgrade from the team’s earlier Candle Dragon‑I, or Zhulong-1, prototype unveiled in November 2024. Compared with its predecessor, the new battery cuts radioactive material use to just 22%, boosting short‑circuit current to 2.5 times and maximum power to 2.6 times, all while maintaining the same voltage and stability. Among performance gains, the effective volume of the device shrank to just 17% of the original, resulting in a dramatic 15.5‑fold increase in volumetric power density. Su Maogen, who leads the project team at Northwest Normal University, said carbon‑14 had a half‑life of 5,730 years, giving the battery a theoretical lifespan of thousands of years. Su said the device operated reliably between minus 100 degrees and 200 degrees Celsius (-148 to 392 Fahrenheit), making it suitable for medical implants, use in deep‑sea and polar regions, and defence and aerospace applications.
The "Millennium Source" series carbon-14 nuclear battery results released this time represent a benchmark practice by Northwest Normal University in the full chain of national strategic scientific research, deep industry-university-research collaboration, and achievement transformation. Leveraging the profound disciplinary foundation, talent pool and research platform advantages of Northwest Normal University, Gansu Zhulong Technology Co., Ltd. undertakes the transformation of scientific research achievements, promoting engineering application and industrial implementation, achieving a key leap from the laboratory to engineering, marketization, and industrialization. “Nuclear batteries are vital for space exploration, polar missions, specialised equipment and unmanned operations, and are also a key part of China’s new-energy strategy,” China’s official Science and Technology Daily reported. “Earlier versions suffered from low power, poor integration and high costs, so the team focused on making the device compact, powerful, affordable and fully domestically produced.” Nuclear batteries differ fundamentally from nuclear power plant reactors. Instead of relying on chain-reaction fission, they harness energy from the natural radioactive decay of isotopes such as carbon‑14 or plutonium‑238.
Nuclear batteries are indispensable long-life energy sources for scenarios such as space exploration, polar scientific research, special equipment and unattended operations, and are also a crucial component of the national new energy system and strategic scientific and technological strength. For a long time, industry applications have commonly faced issues such as low output power, low structural integration, and high application costs. To address this, the project team focused on developing carbon-14 nuclear batteries with high output power, small size, and low cost, promoting independent and controllable technology and process innovation. One conventional approach uses thermoelectric materials to turn decay heat into power, but those systems tend to be bulky and operate at high temperatures. The new carbon-14 battery works differently: it directs beta particles (high-speed electrons) from decay into a silicon carbide semiconductor where they excite electrons to produce current. It is essentially a solar panel powered by radiation instead of light.
Compared to the "Zhulong-1" carbon-14 nuclear battery engineering prototype released in March 2025, the "Millennium Source" series results released this time have achieved five major technological breakthroughs, covering radiation source adaptation technology, silicon carbide energy conversion technology, three-dimensional stacked packaging technology, intelligent power management technology, and wireless self-powered sensing technology, establishing a domestically produced independent and controllable technology system. This series of indicators breaks through the limitations of low efficiency, high cost, large size and low power density of carbon-14 nuclear batteries, achieving a systematic upgrade in miniaturization, high power, low cost and high integration. The current products have high industrial value. The battery, measuring just 16.8 cubic cm and using 129 millicuries (a measure of radioactivity) of carbon‑14, delivers a short‑circuit current of 0.713 microampere (µA), an open‑circuit voltage of 2.06V, a fill factor of 0.77 and a maximum output of 1.13 µW. Importantly, the critical energy‑conversion component, the silicon carbide transducer, is fully domestically made.
The developers’ breakthroughs enabled smaller, more powerful, cheaper and more integrated designs, offering great industrial value. Nuclear batteries are currently used mainly in deep‑space missions. Notable examples include NASA’s Voyager probes launched in 1977, the Curiosity Mars rover in 2012 and China’s Chang’e‑3 and Chang’e‑4 lunar mission rovers. At the conference site, Gansu Zhulong Technology Co., Ltd. signed strategic cooperation agreements with five enterprises: China Isotope & Radiation Corporation, CNNC Qinshan Isotope Co., Ltd., China United Engineering Corporation Limited, CCTEG Digital Innovation Technology (Chongqing) Co., Ltd., and Zhejiang Isotope Labeling Medical Technology Co., Ltd. The parties will engage in long-term cooperation in areas such as technology achievement transformation of carbon-14 nuclear batteries, multi-scenario engineering applications, supply of carbon-14 isotope raw materials and industry standard formulation, jointly building a complete industrial closed loop of "scientific research, product finalization, scenario testing, compliant use, standard formulation, mass production and waste recycling."
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