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NEC Unveils Methanol-Fueled Laptop 363

genericplacebo writes "Japanese computer giant NEC Corp. Monday revealed a prototype of a laptop computer that runs on a methanol fuel cell instead of a rechargeable battery, and said it will start selling it next year. NEC initially plans to introduce a computer with a fuel-cell system able to run for five consecutive hours on a single cartridge of methanol fuel, but also plans to make a PC within two years that can run continuously for as long as 40 hours."
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NEC Unveils Methanol-Fueled Laptop

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  • Merger... (Score:5, Funny)

    by mgcsinc ( 681597 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:41PM (#6335192)
    I was already worried about the concepts of television, telephony, and high-fi merging entirely with that of the personal computer, now I have to worry about computers becoming strikingly similar to automobiles and weed-whackers?
  • Well (Score:3, Insightful)

    by dysprosia ( 661648 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:42PM (#6335197)
    Doesn't say how chunky the battery will be. Or how heavy it will be. Battery life is a Good Thing, but if it's gotta be at the price of portability, what's the point for a laptop?
    • Re:Well (Score:3, Informative)

      by CeZa ( 562197 )
      1.9 lbs. fuel cell

      but total weight including everything required to transform the power,etc. is 4.9lbs. so where usual batteries weigh 1 lbs. +/- 2 this one would weigh 5... so the ultrathin 4lbs. laptop weighs 9lbs.
      • Re:Well (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Nogami_Saeko ( 466595 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:08PM (#6335439)
        Seems to me that the proper approach would be to make a laptop that can run on either a battery or a fuel cell. If you're running near AC, run on battery and recharge occasionally. If you're on a 10hr flight or something and they havn't been thoughful enough to have accessory plugs on the plane for laptops and such, or if you're on safari in the middle of Africa, switch to the fuel cell.

        The issue I'm worried about is that the laptop/fuel cell industry will to do what printer manufacturers did for the printer. In other words, make the fuel cell hardware cheap and affordable and price-fix the actual fuel refill components as high as possible to maximize profits. The old razor blade pricing scheme.

        From what I understand of fuel cells, besides requiring the fuel itself which is rather cheap, it requires a rather expensive (and no-doubt proprietary) catalyst component (platinum?) which sort of throws the "refill at home" idea out.

        Maybe you could get 5x methanol refills before replacing the catalyst or something, but I'm waiting to see what the pricing of the fuel technology will be before jumping onboard.

        N.
        • Re:Well (Score:5, Insightful)

          by BitterOak ( 537666 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:52PM (#6335716)
          By definition a catalyst is not consumed in the reaction, and so theoretically, it should not be necessary to replace it for a very long time.

          As far as I understood, the whole advantage of fuel cell based laptops was you could simply open a spout and pour more fuel into it, like a camp stove. If, instead, you must buy proprietary cartridges like printers, I don't see why people would opt for a fuel cell based computer rather than a conventional rechargeable battery. In fact, the proprietary scheme you described above would be rather more like a laptop which runs on non-rechargeable batteries! I can't imagine anyone buying such a thing.

          • Re:Well (Score:4, Interesting)

            by Beryllium Sphere(tm) ( 193358 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @09:53PM (#6336358) Journal
            >By definition a catalyst is not consumed in the reaction, and so theoretically, it should not be necessary to replace it for a very long time.

            Precisely correct. The open question is whether impurities in random cheap methanol sources will poison the catalyst, like running leaded gas through a car with a catalytic converter.

        • Re:Well (Score:3, Insightful)

          by zogger ( 617870 )
          you can get 55 gallon drums of methanol various places, ag supply is one of them. That should last you ...awhile, heh.

          Personally, I like methanol over a hydrogen-based economy (at this time), liquid fuel, very little of anything weird required to use it, and storage is no problem. Gas up your ride, gas up your box at the same pump!
      • The fuel cell outputs current, ergo "transforming it" takes a switching power supply - just like the laptop already has. And even a switcher for a home PC doesn't weigh more than a few pounds; take it out of the box and it's not likely to weigh more than a pound or two. And that's for a home unit.

    • by Atario ( 673917 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:04PM (#6335408) Homepage
      Instead of developing this strictly for laptops, why not come up with a general-purpose methanol (or other) fuel-cell? One where you could have your choice of plug type, polarity, voltage, and AC or DC? Like one of those omni-usage wall-warts, but without the wall? If it were no bigger than, say, a six-pack, I bet it would be more than useful for travelers of any sort.
  • by NumberField ( 670182 ) * on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:42PM (#6335200)
    Computers are already too unstable and crash-prone. I hate to think how it'll be when my laptop is busy drinking alcohol while I'm trying to work...
    • " Computers are already too unstable and crash-prone. I hate to think how it'll be when my laptop is busy drinking alcohol while I'm trying to work..."

      Yeah but look at all the great writers like Hemmingway that were constantly pissed. Your e-mails, blogs and IMs could now become so much more... expressive.


    • Methanol will just blank out the screen...
  • So what (Score:2, Insightful)

    this means jack squat to me right now. I have an iBook that lasts about 4-5 hours on a full charge and to power it all I have to use are those little holes in the walls you may have seen.

    Fuel cells WILL be a big deal, but right now you're retarted to buy one: electricity just workd too well already
    • Re:So what (Score:5, Insightful)

      by (54)T-Dub ( 642521 ) * <tpaine.gmail@com> on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:47PM (#6335251) Journal
      I assume that you would still be able to plug into the wall to use your laptop when you don't want to use the fuel cell. The best part about this is the 'instant recharge' effect. You don't have to wait hours for your batter to recharge. If the market takes off you will be able to buy Methanol fuel cells at starbucks.

      Laptops seems like a great market entry point for fuel cells.
      • Re:So what (Score:5, Funny)

        by Surak ( 18578 ) * <.surak. .at. .mailblocks.com.> on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:00PM (#6335369) Homepage Journal
        Of course almost no one will call them 'Methanol fuel cells' because that sounds too nerdish and is too difficult to say.

        So when you go to Starbucks and order you're double espresso latte with extra whipped cream and sprinkles on top, you'll probably be asking for a 'meth pack' with that. :)
        • Re:So what (Score:3, Informative)

          by Izago909 ( 637084 )
          That just sounds wrong. You try to help save the environment by saving energy, but you drink over-priced products from a company that levels thousands of acres of rain forrest to grow coffee. Lets not forget that they fund intertribal warfare to help remove any people living there.
          Thats like WalMart fighting sweat shops by only selling clothing "Made in the USA". Yea, some small Pacific islands are US holdings, even though sweat shops run amok there. But who cares as long as the gas your SUV sucks down isn
          • That just sounds wrong. You try to help save the environment by saving energy, but you drink over-priced products from a company that levels thousands of acres of rain forrest to grow coffee. Lets not forget that they fund intertribal warfare to help remove any people living there.

            Ummm...yeah, exactly, right. Don't forget those bleached paperboard coffee cups they serve that coffee in either. Let's also not forget that methanol itself is somewhat harmful to the environment, either (although it's much mo
          • Re:So what (Score:5, Funny)

            by Patik ( 584959 ) * <cpatik@gmail.COMMAcom minus punct> on Monday June 30, 2003 @08:54PM (#6336068) Homepage Journal

            I bet you're fun at parties.

      • Refill at Starbucks? I knew their coffee tasted a little funky...
    • by expro ( 597113 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:48PM (#6335257)
      It must be that it will be easier to take extra flammable fuel on board an airplane than extra batteries!
      • It must be that it will be easier to take extra flammable fuel on board an airplane than extra batteries!
        Yeah, I'm sure the FAA/CAA/Transport Canada will be absolutely thrilled at the prospect. I can see it now: "I'm sorry sir, we need to confiscate your fuel cell."
    • Re:So what (Score:5, Insightful)

      by DarkMan ( 32280 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:57PM (#6335339) Journal
      The point with this is that currently you cannot buy one. This is (one of?) the first methanol fuel cells laptops. Give it a year (frankly, year an a half given typical engineering development time estimates), then, and only then, will you have a choice.

      Now, all that aside, I'd rather have the fuel cell system. Let's assume that they weigh the same, and run for a similar time on one charge, like you suggest. With a methanol fuel cell, a replacement charge will weight, what, 100g, cost around a dollar or two, and be field recharageable. This means that I can carry enough fuel to last a day of use without falling over. To do that same trick with batteries, you'd have to carry 5 spare batteries, each costing, what, 50-75 dollars [0], and weigh the thick end of a kilogram each. Not only that, but spare batteries have an interenal discharge rate, meaning that they cannot be stored indefinitly (It's about a month for NiCd, less for NiMh, dunno about Li technologies).

      Granted, if you break a methanol cartridge, then it's not pleasant stuff. Mind you, nethers the contents of your typical battery.

      The trade off is then you can carry much more fuel, but you'll need to find a specialist to get more, vs the limited fuel and easy refilling for battery technologies.

      Once the runtime of a single cartridge of methanol gets up, to me that's a no brainer. YMMV

      [0] Off top of head, no actual idea how accurate that is - it's based of raw cells.
      • by nounderscores ( 246517 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:34PM (#6335599)
        How long do you think that the printer ink refillers start marketing knock off fuel cartridges and "self fueler" fuel purifiers which filter camp stove quality wood alcohol into laptop grade fuel?
      • Re:So what (Score:5, Informative)

        by Zirnike ( 640152 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:42PM (#6335648) Journal
        Methanol is like isoproponol. It'll evaporate fairly quickly, shouldn't damage your laptop's plastic much, etc. Unlike IPA, it can be absorbed through the skin and causes nerve damage, but it requires a fair amount for any significant effect. Basically, if you break a refill cartridge, wipe your hands then pick up the spill, and that's pretty much it. Only people like me who work with it all the time really need to be worried about exposure.

        (MSDS sheet for MeOH.) [bu.edu]

        Admittedly, I'd be happier if they got ethanol fuel cells working. It's much less toxic, and supplies are easier to find.

        • Re:So what (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Glonoinha ( 587375 )
          I used to use lab grade methanol to clean computers. Takes the dirt and grime right off an old IBM PC/AT case, with the paint coming off if you rub a little longer.

          Built like tanks, those old IBM machines.
      • Heat and efficiency (Score:2, Interesting)

        by StriderA ( 60512 )
        Sure, but what about heat?

        Reading some information on various fuel cells [fuelcells.org], it mentions various types, the coolest being the Direct Methanol Fuel Cells (DMFC) which runs at about 120-190 degrees F (about 50-100 deg C) which would require their own heat problems, which are already a big deal with laptops. Aside from all the "what about on airplanes" questions, I'm wondering about how well the laptop will run at those temperatures. They'll have to swap out some components comming standard on laptops nowdays
    • Re:So what (Score:5, Funny)

      by Minderbinder106 ( 663468 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:58PM (#6335353) Homepage
      Sweet, you spelled 'retarded' wrong. What a retart
    • " I have an iBook that lasts about 4-5 hours on a full charge and to power it all I have to use are those little holes in the walls you may have seen."

      Ever been on a plane ride where those holes in the walls don't seem to be anywhere near your seat?
    • Re:So what (Score:3, Insightful)

      by gnarled ( 411192 )
      iBooks along with most laptops have very nice removable battery packs. Maybe a system could be devised where the battery pack could be swapped out for the methanol cell whenever you need something for a much longer time than 4-5 hours. Then when your off the plane you can put your battery back in and go back to using your standard convenient energy source; ie the wall.
    • Unfortunately batteries are still crap enough that after a certain amount of recharging they develop a memory. Note if your cellphone is of a certain age now it won't have even nearly the life it used to. Now with cellphones nowadays the batteries have tended to become cheaper to replace (I remember mid-90's when to get a new battery for my cell it was going to cost me around £100) at around £30, but laptops as far as I know are still far more expensive to do so for.
      Fuel cells on the other hand
    • Re:So what (Score:3, Insightful)

      by kavau ( 554682 )
      this means jack squat to me right now. I have an iBook that lasts about 4-5 hours on a full charge and to power it all I have to use are those little holes in the walls you may have seen. Fuel cells WILL be a big deal, but right now you're retarted to buy one: electricity just workd too well already

      Well, just think about the wildlife photographer, who uses his notebook to assess his digital photographs; or the "embedded reporter" in the middle of (whatever country Bush is going to invade next)... they sur

  • Cost? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by levin ( 170168 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:44PM (#6335216) Homepage
    So . . . how much will it cost to recharge/replace the fuel cell?
    • "So . . . how much will it cost to recharge/replace the fuel cell?"

      More to the point, will your mates include your laptop in the next round?

      Free as in methanol, anyone?

      • Re:Cost? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:35PM (#6335605) Journal
        You remember those stories about how drinking "moonshine" (homemade) alcohol can make you go blind?

        That's because of methanol.

        Methanol = industrial alcohol (poisonous)
        Ethanol = grain alcohol (drinkable)

        Gonna be awfully hard to use a laptop when you can't see!
        =Smidge=
  • Does this mean I get to use the carpool lane of the information superhighway?
  • by Faust7 ( 314817 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:45PM (#6335230) Homepage
    Dare you to put an AMD in it.
  • by rkz ( 667993 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:46PM (#6335238) Homepage Journal
    Some might think that fuel cell is the greatest thing since Lithium Ion batteries but its really another way of getting money out of the poor consumer. The current range of IBM R40 centrino notebooks can provide you with 4 hours [basoncomputer.com] of battery life.

    Laptop makers are looking for the high profit margins that ink jet printer manufacturers enjoy. How much will these full cell cartrages cost? Around $5 a pop? Thats absurd, wouldn't you rather recharge the fucking thing!
    • Yeah! (Score:4, Funny)

      by John Jorsett ( 171560 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:08PM (#6335436)
      Some might think that fuel cell is the greatest thing since Lithium Ion batteries but its really another way of getting money out of the poor consumer.

      God damn them to hell for offering products to people. Bloody capitalist swine. We'll immolate them on a stack of their own fuel cells! Power to the people! Or not, in this case.

    • by oolon ( 43347 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:14PM (#6335475)
      It says it the article that your be able to refil it, (hay you gas your car without thinking about it). Methanol is very cheap you will be able to buy a bottle of it from a Home Improvement (DIY) shop for 2 bucks and the size bottles they sell I will expect that will be 10-20 or so charges. Which compares quite favourably with electric. As to flying on planes and such, they are making sure the are approved before releasing them to the public.

      James
    • by SuperBanana ( 662181 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:33PM (#6335587)
      The current range of IBM R40 centrino notebooks can provide you with 4 hours [basoncomputer.com] of battery life.Laptop makers are looking for the high profit margins that ink jet printer manufacturers enjoy. How much will these full cell cartrages cost?

      Guess what? Nobody ever talks about it, but Lithium Ion batteries have a VERY finite lifetime; a FEW(very few) hundred discharge-recharge cycles; every time you discharge the battery, and the more you discharge it- the more of the battery you permanently destroy.

      Companies that make these Lithium Ion cells(no foolin', that square battery contains a whole bunch of cells that are almost exactly AA size) won't sell them to you, of course- why? Because if you overload them, they catch on fire pretty handily, so you have to be a "certified" "solution provider" lest you blow yourself up. Mind you, the battery companies could install thermal/current fuses in the batteries, but they don't want to, because it conveniently lets them control the market, and gives them an avenue of escape if a pack for some camcorder or digicam has serious problems- they can point the finger at that company.

      So, even though Panasonic still makes the cell used by my Powerbook Lombard, and even though you cannot buy new Lombard/Pismo batteries(they're no longer made, period), I can't fix my lombard's battery.

    • "Some might think that fuel cell is the greatest thing since Lithium Ion batteries but its really another way of getting money out of the poor consumer. The current range of IBM R40 centrino notebooks can provide you with 4 hours of battery life."

      No, it's really another way to provide power to people who can't always get it. Imagine the business traveller spending all day getting from one end to the country to the other. He can't recharge his laptop on the plane. He could bring an extra battery or two,
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:48PM (#6335255)
    Consider if you really think the FAA will allow you to bring spare FUEL onto an airplane. I expect that the place where you really need longer battery life - an airplane - will be the one place where these are not allowed.
  • Ob Homer (Score:5, Funny)

    by eap ( 91469 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:49PM (#6335271) Journal
    Mmm...alcohol fueled computer. One for you, one for me.
  • Methanol? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:50PM (#6335276) Journal
    It uses METHanol?

    Leak or vent even a little of that onto/into the user and he could go blind.

    Even WITHOUT surfing porn sites. B-(
    • Re:Methanol? (Score:3, Informative)

      by halftrack ( 454203 )
      I've got 5 liters of 50-80% methanol sitting on the floor and handle it quite often when flying model airplanes. And yes it's toxic and you can go blind, but only if you drink a reasonable amount (or maybe get it into your eye.) However I routinly spill it on my skin and even blow suck on tubes that carry methanol and it's never made me sick. So unless someone drinks it, it's not more dangerous than, say using a pair of scissors. You have to do something stupid to get seriously injured, not much more danger
      • No, you (probably) can't go blind from getting it into your eye or breathing fumes. It's not the methanol that's so toxic, it's the byproducts which are formed when it's digested (like formaldehyde). Virtually all methanol poisoning cases occur when people substitute it for ethanol and drink it.
    • Re:Methanol? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by DarkMan ( 32280 )
      Not quite.

      It will only adversly affect vision when consumed. Getting methanol on your hands has an unpleasent smell and leaves the skin feeling really yucky [0]. If you leave it there for prolonged times, then it can cross the skin, but I'm not convinced that's a significant danger in a consumer product (given that people will tend to go an wash it off should it get spilt).

      Methanol/Ethanol solutions are available from my high street - it's not that dangerous.

      In fact, I'd rate it about as dangrous as bo
  • by cpopin ( 671433 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:50PM (#6335277) Homepage
    So I'll have to pull start this laptop to boot it up?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Ok heres whats going to bake your noodle about adopting fuel cells: Will fuel cells be proprietary in the same manner that printer cartridges are proprietary?

    Will you only be allowed to buy your fuel cells from your laptop manufacturer for an overpriced ammount? And how long until they start emplacing mechanisms that ensure that your fuel cell can't be refilled outside of the factory? And worse yet, when will they start using the DMCA to enforce these policies?
    • "Will fuel cells be proprietary in the same manner that printer cartridges are proprietary?"

      Yep. In the same way that batteries and AC power supplies are.

      Is that a bad thing? Not necessarily. I mean I understand what you're saying, and I think your fears are justified. However, I wouldn't fret just yet. There's a well established alternative to fuel-cells that people'll be happy to revert to if these companies get greedy. Lithium ion batteries. The printing industry doesn't have this type of compe
  • by erroneus ( 253617 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:53PM (#6335301) Homepage
    ...I can see where these fuel cells will find their way onto the "Prohibited Items" list at airports all over the USA.

    As it stands, even simple Bic lighters are prohibited and will be confiscated from all checked baggage... I can only imagine what they'd do with a methanol cartridge.
    • I can only imagine what they'd do with a methanol cartridge

      Um... confiscate it too? What else is there to imagine? I suppose they could high-five each other, have everybody over for a methanol party, go blind because they never can remember if its ethanol or methanol that's safe to drink...

      Laptop manufacturers might as well dream up a laptop powered by U-235 (single charge might last 500 yrs) as far as airport acceptability is concerned.

    • Bic's are prohibited? What about steal wool and a 9 volt battery? Stick the wool in the drink you're served and touch the wool with the battery terminals and you'll get a nice little fire going.

      I'm sure I could think of dozens, or hundreds, of ways to do mre damage with innocent items than with a Bic lighter. Doh.
  • V8 dual-hemi, supercharged laptop.

    Does it include a roll-cage?

  • which promise to power electronics ten times longer than the lithium-ion batteries currently in use.

    Let's say the average laptop battery lasts 4-5 hours, as given in a previous iBook example. So that's 40-50 hours.

    How many folks ever need to be in front of a laptop for 40-50 hours?
  • "Man dies from carbon monoxide intoxication after using laptop for five straight hours, more at 11"
  • Finally (Score:5, Insightful)

    by poptones ( 653660 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:55PM (#6335325) Journal
    Nice to see products finally coming about. I wonder how many tons of old batteries go into landfills every year from stuff like portable music players and flashlights? Or camcorders and laptops? The future is getting greener all the time.

  • Smelly laptops for smelly geeks.

  • by erroneus ( 253617 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @06:57PM (#6335343) Homepage
    I'd have an endless supply of fuel! My laptop would never go down.
  • These laptops could be good for those of us who go camping or for the army, for researchers who do not have an electrical outlet in close vicinity. Of-course for them to be useful, the fuel cells should last at least 50 hours at a time but for sure not 5. Once they do last for 50-100 hours a case can be made for them to be used by general public.
  • Methanol 101 (Score:5, Informative)

    by dark-br ( 473115 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:01PM (#6335375) Homepage
    Methanol (CH303) is the simplest alcohol, containing one carbon atom. It is a colorless, tasteless liquid with a very faint odor and is commonly known as "wood alcohol."

    Methanol is one of a number of fuels that could substitute for gasoline or diesel fuel in passenger cars, light trucks, and heavy-duty trucks and buses.

    It's physical and chemical characteristics result in several inherent advantages as an automotive (or laptop) :) fuel:

    Emissions from methanol engines/laptops are low in reactive hydrocarbons (which form smog) and in toxic compounds. Methanol-fueled trucks and buses emit almost no particulate matter (which cause smoke and odor, and can also be carcinogenic), and much less nitrogen oxides than their diesel-fueled counterparts.

    It can be manufactured from a variety of carbon-based feedstocks such as natural gas, coal, and biomass (e.g., wood). Use of methanol would diversify the country's fuel supply and reduce its dependence on imported petroleum.

    Methanol is much less flammable than gasoline and results in less severe fires when it does ignite.

    It also is a high-octane fuel that offers excellent acceleration and vehicle power.

    With economies of scale, methanol could be produced, distributed, and sold to consumers at prices competitive with gasoline.

    Because of its outstanding performance and fire safety characteristics, methanol is the only fuel used in Indianapolis-type race cars. Following a series of methanol vehicle development and demonstration programs throughout the 1980's, a limited number of methanol passenger cars and buses are now commercially available. There are approximately 14,000 methanol passenger cars in use, mostly in Federal and private fleets, and about 400 methanol buses in daily operation, mostly in California.

    Methanol is used in a number of consumer products, including paint strippers, duplicator fluid, model airplane fuel, and dry gas. Most windshield washer fluids are 50 percent methanol.

  • This is good news... (Score:2, Informative)

    by c.r.o.c.o ( 123083 )
    Already 3 posters that prefer batteries over fuel cell powered laptops. Well, I can't say I disagree that batteries are better, but there are exceptions. There are places where charging a laptop is not possible.

    I'm always going to a little coffee shop where the only power outlet is all the way in the back, so I can't recharge my battery. Now I have a laptop that lasts for about 4 hours between charges, but I can't always show up there with a fully charged battery. Why do I keep going there? Somebody upstai
  • by silverhalide ( 584408 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:01PM (#6335383)
    I see most people scoff at the idea of buying fuel cell cartridges for their laptop. Well, then this laptop isn't for you -- you have easy access to electricity. This is revolutionary because now you have a portable computer ANYWHERE, and you can recharge it with a little cartridge instead of lugging a huge generator with you.

    Hello military and 3rd world applications. I can see a brand new market -- deploy some these bad boys, set up a wireless access point, and you have an instant internet community with no other power infrastructure.

    This is another step in getting computing power to the third world and closing the digital divide.
    • it's a step toward freeing us all from the grid. There are plenty of people in the US who have to generate their own power because they live halfway up a mountain or ten miles from the nearest grid connection. Once this evolves into a technology capable of supplying higher currents then we can be rid of internal combustion generators in off-grid applications.

      Of course, if the catalyst isn't capable of being "cleaned" or efficiently replaced then it's all just so much more useless crap...

  • Fuel cells are certainly a promising technology, and it is no suprise that they will eventually make their way into consumer devices. NEC apparently will offer this model as early as next year, but a few details are missing from the article.

    How much space does the fuel cartridge take up compared with an average laptop battery? How much does the fuel cartridge weigh compared with an average laptop battery? How much is the initial fuel cell cost compared with an average laptop battery? How much is the i
  • by ncc74656 ( 45571 ) <scott@alfter.us> on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:03PM (#6335396) Homepage Journal
    ...for a methanol-powered notebook:

    Bender.

  • Why Methanol??? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by dtjohnson ( 102237 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:03PM (#6335400)
    Methanol is a very potent neurotoxin, is relatively volatile, and has a much lower energy storage density than ethanol. Ethanol is relatively non-toxic by comparison (unless you imbibe very heavily), is less volatile, contains much more energy per mass or volume unit, and can be made and distilled to an acceptable grade by just about anyone, anywhere.
  • Yeah, these machines are sweet, I'm writing this from one right now! *hic*
  • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • NEC claims 5 hr battery life. those who want this battery life can possibly buy transmeta based computer. you get lower speed and better battery life. how many of you would want Lithium battery and 1 GHz computer vs fuel cell and 2 GHz computer, if they both have same battery life and same cost? i would go with former.
  • Reckon I'll need a bigger screen for when I've emptied the fuel cell.

  • Does anyone know what the by-rpoducts of the reaction would be? I'm no chemist, but I'm guessing water, carbon dioxide, and probably heat.
    I don't really mind the CO2, but water and more heat with my laptop? I dunno....

    Of course I'm guessing about the reaction and leftovers. Can someone tell me if I'm right or wrong?

    • by forkboy ( 8644 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @07:36PM (#6335613) Homepage
      Direct Methanol Fuel Cells (DMFC)

      The direct methanol fuel cell is a variant of the PEM fuel cellwhich uses methanol directly without prior reforming. The methanol is converted to carbon dioxide and hydrogen at the anode. The hydrogen then goes on to react with oxygen as in a standard PEM fuel cell.

      Anode Reaction: CH3OH+ H2OCO2 + 6H+ + 6e-

      Cathode Reaction: 3/2O2 + 6H+ + 6e- 3H2O

      Cell Reaction: CH3OH+ 3/2O2CO2 + 2H2O

      These cells are expected to operate at around 120C, which is slightly higher than the standard PEM fuel cell, and give efficiencies of around 40 per cent. One drawback is that the low temperature conversion of methanol to hydrogen and carbon dioxide needs a larger quantity of platinum catalyst than in conventional PEM cells. This increased cost is, however, expected to be more than outweighed by the convenience of using liquid fuel and the ability to function without a reforming unit. The technology behind direct methanol fuel cells is still in the early stages of development but it has been successfully demonstrated powering mobile phones and laptop computers, potential target end uses in future years.
  • Do fuel cells produce gases? Even if they don't under normal circumstances, is it possible for a defective one to produce gases?

    The reason I ask is - a small leak, and a spark, and you've got more to worry about than spilling the expresso on the keyboard.

    Until its proven (and I don't see people combusting at the local Starbucks), I will have a fallback plan:

    1. Get one of those heavy duty backup storage batteries used to jumpstart automobiles (these have 'cigarette lighter' style female plugs on them).
    2
  • by Bake ( 2609 )
    Thank god it's not fueled by ethanol.

    If it were fueled by ethanol I'd always come back to the two choices ... Two more hours of laptop time, or get drunk.
  • by MasteroftheVoxel ( 162902 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @08:02PM (#6335785)
    I'm surprised at how many slashdotters are suspicious about this technology.

    Methanol is *extremely* cheap to make. We are talking about buying a gallon or two for less than a dollar. Yes, it is flammable but not like gasoline. There isn't a risk of explosion. Do you ever worry about your lighter exploding in your pocket? Yes, its poisonous but only if you drink it. Ever drink glass cleaner or windshield wiper fluid? Didn't think so. Its sort of like that. Its much worse to drink gasoline (we use it all the time in cars and how many people are poisoned by that?) and opening a laptop Lithium-ion or Nicad battery and eating the contents is far worse.

    I'm surprised at how happy people are with laptop batter performance these days. You are lucky to get 4 hours, especially if the battery is old. YOu can get more, but the batteries get very heavy! Methanol, on the other hand, is quite light.

  • by Quixadhal ( 45024 ) on Monday June 30, 2003 @10:58PM (#6336715) Homepage Journal
    Excellent, now I can sit at the local mexican restaurant ALL DAY, and my laptop will keep up as long as the refriend beans and beer keep coming!

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