Energy

Better Fuel Cells for Laptops

Adding a chemical found in antifreeze to fuel cells could provide a longer-lasting alternative to batteries in portable electronics.

  • Wednesday, September 13, 2006
  • By Kate Greene

Batteries are the bane of consumer electronics users. They provide only a limited amount of power, take hours to recharge, and over time become less long-lasting. For years, engineers have been eyeing fuel cells--devices that produce electricity by mixing a fuel with oxygen molecules--as a longer-lasting alternative power supply. But the technology has always encountered hurdles that keep it from being as practical and cost effective as batteries.

Now researchers at Arizona State University's Biodesign Institute in Tempe have developed a technique that could help make better fuel cells for laptops, military-grade communication devices, and, potentially, cell phones. In research presented yesterday at the American Chemical Society meeting in San Francisco, Dominic Gervasio, associate professor in the Center for Applied Nanobioscience at Arizona State, and his team showed that by adding a chemical found in antifreeze to sodium borohydride--a liquid used to store hydrogen, the molecule that powers fuel cells--they can make a longer-lasting fuel cell. The resulting fuel could power a laptop twice as long as any battery on the market, while allowing room temperature operation, unlike many other fuel cells.

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Fuel cells for portable devices have been gaining traction in the past few years as the technology behind them has steadily improved. Indeed, they've now reached beyond research labs, and made their way into various forms of production. Millennium Cell, an Eatontown, NJ-based company, supplies fuel cells for military applications. And by year-end, New York-based Medis Technologies plans to offer a consumer fuel cell device designed to instantly recharge standard batteries in cell phones, MP3 players, and laptops.

Sodium borohydride, the solution used by Millennium Cell, Medis, and the Arizona State team is becoming a popular choice to store hydrogen for portable fuel cells, says Gervasio. One reason is that it's used with the most-established fuel cell design. This type of fuel cell works by combining hydrogen with oxygen from the air to produce electric current. In addition, systems that use sodium borohydride can be made as small as conventional batteries because the solution stores a large amount of hydrogen in a small volume. Moreover, it's a relatively safe liquid that isn't flammable. "You could take a match and put it out in it," Gervasio says.

But to succeed as a replacement for batteries, these fuel cells have to prove themselves significantly better than the batteries they aim to replace, says Gervasio. Currently, most sodium borohydride fuel cells produce only slightly more electrical energy per volume of fuel than conventional batteries, he says. To increase the performance of their fuel cell system, Gervasio and his team knew they needed to increase the amount of hydrogen available to the fuel cell from the sodium borohydride solution.

Micro-fuel-cell systems generally contain three parts: a cartridge of fuel, a hydrolysis chamber where hydrogen is extracted from the liquid fuel, and a fuel cell where hydrogen mixes with oxygen, creating electricity. In the Arizona State researchers' system, a mixture of water and sodium borohydride is pumped from the cartridge into the hydrolysis chamber, which contains a catalyst. The catalyst sets off a chemical reaction that liberates hydrogen from the sodium borohydride solution, and also creates byproducts that are pumped out of the chamber and back into the fuel cartridge to be disposed later.

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rhogan1

3 Comments

  • 1965 Days Ago
  • 09/29/2006

better batteries for laptops

the major battery and laptop companies, dell, sony, lg.... are all awaiting the release this fall of disruptive technology in the small battery field.   they know, but it is not yet public knowledge that the new microvascular battery from SigFx will eliminate the heat problem and increase battery life 2-300% a phenomenal increase.  this 8 year project has been below the radar but will be publically announced in the next 4-8 weeks.      there has been no efforts to get the word out, but now is the time,   ask around to the larger players battery and computer, and you will be able to get some limited info.

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talon1973

1 Comment

  • 1948 Days Ago
  • 10/16/2006

Re: better batteries for laptops

That's a fantastic idea.  I hope we'll see it in mass production. 

I'm currenty doing research and development for Water for Fuel LLC.  I have built several fuel cells now and currently working on converting an old Dodge Ram V8 engine to run off H+H+O produced via splitting water.  I'm currently working on development of pulsed DC to operate large cells on current 12v power source used in current vehicles.

As for my second job, I'm Sony certified feild technician mostly working with Projections, LCDs, DLP and Plasma display technology.  All sets that uses the energy compliance technology uses switch mode power supplies that converts AC to DC, then modulates DC at a much higher frequency then household outlets provides.  This modulated DC is now converted to high frequency AC and converted once again to DC.  This time, when a device requires more current, the DC modulater will adjust frequency accordingly to allow circuits to draw what it needs without having heavy current drainage from household AC. 

I'm basically using similar techniques in splitting water for fuel without overloading any vehicles 12volt charging system. It's been a long tough road and countless hours on designing, expirmenting, research and development of these electronics for this purpose.

I truly beleive that we all must come together and start converting fossil energy sources to much cleaner, healther, longer lasting and if possible, total renewal sources of energy.  All of us have this technology practically in the palms of our hands. I beleive with proper education and with great human collectiveness, we can slowly start making this shift now without harming our oil boys profits by getting them to shift to other forms of cleaner sources of energy.

I'm happy to see new batteries and fuel cells ariving to the hands of our people in this nation and around the world in hopes that our grand kids have all new ways of powering their lives without all the destruction and health problems we experience today. 

Great review on the laptop batteries and I wish you all the luck in the world in developing this new technology.
Jason Swedenskey

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