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September 2004

Ant Power Packs

Renew Power wants to replace your cell-phone battery with a fuel cell.

By Erika Jonietz

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Cell phones used to be just phones, but now they're organizers, Web browsers, cameras, and music players, too. As the power-hungry functions pile up, running phones on batteries gets trickier. Cell-phone makers have been hoping micro fuel cells -- tiny versions of the devices touted as a source of clean power for cars -- would be the answer. But problems with size and power have stalled early methanol-based versions in academic and industry labs. So Renew Power, a spinoff of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, is turning to formic acid, the chemical sprayed by black ants on the attack.

This spring, company engineers began making calls on a Nokia phone using their fuel cell. "We're the first to demonstrate that we can power a cell phone with a fuel cell that actually fits in the phone," says Richard Masel, Renew cofounder and chief technology officer.

It took a bit of international maneuvering to get to this point. In 2003, former executives of Canadian fuel cell developer Ballard Power Systems helped found Tekion in Vancouver, British Columbia, to license and develop fuel cell technologies. A search for promising new approaches to powering cell phones and other portable electronics led Tekion to the formic-acid fuel cells Masel was developing at the University of Illinois. But the research had been funded by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, "so there was no way it was coming to Vancouver," says Tekion cofounder and CEO Neil Huff. So Tekion's founders and Masel formed Renew Power as a U.S. subsidiary of the firm. (Huff serves as CEO of Renew as well.) Tekion and IllinoisVentures, a state venture capital fund, have funneled $1.8 million into Renew, and Huff hopes to begin pilot production of fuel cells for mobile handsets by early 2006.

Of all the markets for micro fuel cells, "handsets are the big prize," says Atakan Ozbek, vice president for energy research at technology research firm ABI Research in Oyster Bay, NY. "The potential is huge." Nearly 500 million handsets were sold last year, and this year predicted sales are even higher. But companies hoping to capture that prize face huge challenges. For instance, Ozbek says, when a cell phone "is on standby, it's drawing almost no power. But once you get a voice call, it increases." This dynamic change in power requirements is not something fuel cells typically handle well, he says.

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September 2004

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Comments

  • Is it effective?
    jotel_mae@yahoo.com on 04/07/2007 at 11:22 PM
    Posts:
    1
    so it means that ants can be a source of fuel?since ant contains micro fuel cell,formic acid..how can a cellphone work through using ants?can u help me?pls....
    Rate this comment: 12345
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