Ads by TechWords

See your link here
Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Mobile/Wireless Computing
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
 

Smaller, more powerful PC fuel cell is on the way

It could be on the market by 2006 at a price of about $90

October 28, 2004 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - A new fuel cell for notebook PCs, more compact and powerful than competing technologies, could be on the market in early 2006 at a price of around $90, its Japanese inventors said this week.
Materials and Energy Research Institute Tokyo Ltd. (Merit) is betting on direct borohydride fuel cell (DBFC) technology, which it sees as cheaper and more compact than the direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC) technology other Japanese companies are developing.
Fuel cells generate an electrical current from a chemical reaction between a hydrogen-containing fuel and oxygen. How much current a cell produces depends on a number of factors, including the exact chemical reaction involved and the area of the membrane that separates the fuel from the oxygen. The length of time the cell can produce power varies with the nature of the particular reaction and the amount of fuel stored in a reservoir.
Merit's technology is similar to DMFC products, but it has several significant advantages, said Seiji Suda, president of Merit.
As with DMFC fuel cells, Merit's fuel cell has an anode, a cathode and a membrane, but instead of using methanol as fuel, it uses a solution of sodium borohydride. Merit's fuel cells develop about four times more power for the same area of membrane than DMFC fuel cells do, Suda said.
"With DBFC, the anode is nickel alloy, which is very cheap, and the membrane is a conventional one. It's all very compact," he said.
Merit's fuel cell will measure 3.1 in. by 3.3 in. by about 0.1 in., and will be able to produce 20 watts of power, enough for a notebook PC, Suda said. "We also intend to stack five of the cells together and connect them in series so that they produce 100 watts. We'll have a working prototype that is suitable to demonstrate mass production for industry in the best case in four months," he said.
Commercial versions should be available in the first few months of 2006 and will cost around $90, he said.
Sodium borohydride dissolves in water at room temperature and is commonly used to bleach magazine and print paper. Dissolved in an alkaline solution at concentrations of up to 10%, it can be stored in cartridges shaped like a pen or a printer ink cartridge that would cost $1.40.
Merit is talking to two companies outside of Japan about producing fuel cells commercially, and it's negotiating with a number of distribution companies about providing the fuel cells to retail outlets. The company is confident it will signcontracts for cell manufacturing and fuel distribution before the end of the year, said Suda.
Several of Japan's largest consumer electronics companies have shown prototype DMFC fuel cells for notebook PCs and mobile phone chargers, but they have not announced prices for future commercial versions of their fuel cells.
Hitachi Ltd. demonstrated a notebook PC fuel cell earlier this month, and NEC Corp. last week showed a notebook PC fuel cell that resembled a notebook computer dock.
In August, NTT DoCoMo Inc. and Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd. announced a fuel cell for recharging cell phones, while Hitachi and Toshiba Corp. showed prototype phone-charger fuel cells earlier this month. Earlier this year, Toshiba announced a fuel cell for portable electronics applications.


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

Additional Resources

POLL RESULTS
Accelerate your knowledge of the IT world you inhabit by viewing the results of a series of polls taken by your IT peers. These polls of 100+ IT professionals each are available for full viewing. They cover key topics such as virtualization, processor performance, green IT, cloud computing and many others. Be a part of the buzz.
WHITE PAPER
Technology is complex. Keeping it running productively shouldn't be. To that end, you want to minimize the number of solutions needed in-house to simplify operations, maintenance, and support. Kodak offers a best-practices model. One company provides support for both scanner and software, for fast problem resolution without vendor finger-pointing. Download now!
WHITE PAPER
Utilizing demand intelligence improves the precision of pricing, product assortments, channel/store placement, and promotion, which are all essential for sustainable revenue management performance. Learn more, download this free whitepaper today.

White Papers & Webcasts

Ponemon Study: The Business Risk of Lost Laptops
Employees can access and store enormous amounts of confidential data on your organization's laptops, leaving your company vulnerable to substantial business risk when...  

How Computrace Tracks and Secures Laptops
(Source: Absolute Software) View this flash demo to see Absolute in action. No matter where computers are connected, you can monitor installed software/hardware,...

Airport Insecurity: The Case of Lost Laptops
(Source: Dell) Business travelers lose more than 12,000 laptops each week in U.S. airports, yet most admit they don't take steps to protect...  

Managing Laptops Outside the Office
(Source: Absolute Software) In this webinar, learn how you can reduce costs by tracking mobile computers no matter where they are located. Featuring...

Success Story: Allina Hospitals & Clinics
(Source: Absolute Software) With an electronic health record system spanning 11 hospitals, Allina required a way to protect 2,700 laptops. Using Computrace, Allina...  

Strategic ECM Webinar
Learn what new strategic business benefits can be realized through ECM!...

Success Story: Grant Thornton LLP
(Source: Absolute Software) Grant Thornton needed to reduce computer loss rates and streamline IT asset management across 49 offices. The company used Computrace...  

Managing And Protecting Your Ever Increasing Mobile Assets
Learn best practices for desktop and application virtualization, computer security, and computer life-cycle management....

Secure Mobility with Absolute Software
(Source: Absolute Software) Absolute Software allows you to centrally manage computers and mobile devices via any internet connection. In this product overview, learn...  

5 Architecture Issues that Impact BES performance
This Live webinar will identify critical log file errors, performance counters, and configurations to pay close attention to when optimizing BES server performance....