Mobile Fuel Cells Soon? 158
Mark Leaman writes "Motorola has made a strategic investment in Vancouver based, micro fuel cell developer Tekion with a view to the inevitable rise of the fuel cell as a power source for mobile products. Tekion is creating a new "personal power source", known as the Formira Power Pack, that will fit inside mobile products and enable consumers to stay connected for as long as needed. "
It's about time (Score:1)
Re:It's about time (Score:1)
Make portable mains power. I'd have no problem carrying that around, and it would make a great joy-buzzer.
Re:It's about time (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It's about time (Score:4, Insightful)
I am concerned about the standardization of the "refueling" functionality. If every fuel cell maker out there uses different valves, nozzles, ports, connectors, whatever for putting fuel in and removing the wastewater, we will jump directly into a confusing nightmare of incompatible plumbing. "Oh, yeah, my cell phone takes a 0.7mm bayonet fuelling nozzle, but my PDA takes a 0.05 inch tapered friction connector." So you still carry four little fuel tanks with you to power your cell phone, PDA, iPod and laptop.
A different question is what airline is going to let people take devices powered by flammable liquids on board, when they're already disallowing butane lighters?
Re:It's about time (Score:5, Insightful)
We've already had batteries exploding in Nokia phones, can you imagine it with fuel cells - "Oh, the Humanity!".
Jolyon
Re:It's about time (Score:2, Informative)
Am I not a liar?
Re:It's about time (Score:2)
Will this bring back waiting lines at the fuel cell pumps? "Hey! I have an important call, hurry up!"
Re:It's about time (Score:2)
What kind of ancient phone are you using that gets only 90 minutes of talk time? My first phone (an analog model from Motorola that I bought back in '96 or '97) did better than that.
Re:It's about time (Score:2)
My Nokia 6600 is one of those gadget packed phones and I only have to charge it about once every 2 days. Funny thing is the battery is about 1/10 the size of that old Nextel/Motorola phone.
Re:It's about time (Score:3, Insightful)
Great... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Great... (Score:2)
Maybe if your phone was running Windows? Hmmm...
Re:Great... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Great... (Score:3, Funny)
When they spell it SIGarette instead of cigarette.
Re:Great... (Score:2, Funny)
There are a number of other options too. None are quite as good as the battery one, but you could try:
1) I forgot to turn the ringer back on after ___________ (e.g. movie, meeti
Re:Great... (Score:2)
I reckon I'm pretty reasonable. Why wouldn't you answer the phone . . . just shuffle forward a bit to avoid making a splash.
As long as needed? (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is this: battery life is never long enough. This is true for three reasons. First, as battery life improves, consumers come to expect more. Second, electronics manufacturers will see the marketing opportunity in "we have the smallest $gadget on the market", and will put in the smallest acceptable battery. Third, as we have seen with computers, manufacturers will continue to pack (some useful, many not) features, sapping that additional power.
Granted, fuel cells have considerable energy-density advantages over current chemical cells, but it will never be enough until we have devices that will *never* need a recharge, battery replacement, or refill.
Re:As long as needed? (Score:2)
Re:As long as needed? (Score:3, Interesting)
Precisely. Though I'm still holding out for SRGs and other more efficient heat engines.
What do you mean I'll get cancer?
What d'ya mean, what d'ya mean? You could shield Alpha radiation with a sheet of paper, and Beta radiation with a bit of foil. You'd get more radiation exposure from the Earth's crust than you would a hundred Plutonium-powered cell phones.
Re:As long as needed? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:As long as needed? (Score:2)
Re:As long as needed? (Score:2)
Re:As long as needed? (Score:1, Funny)
"Bart, we obey the laws of physics in this house!"
Re:As long as needed? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:As long as needed? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:As long as needed? (Score:2)
I think this will solve all but one of your conditions:
16 hours airborne: 20 hours battery time. Solved. Plus more and more airplanes have outlets now.
power strips / hotel: most decent hotels are offering more outlets these days, if you don'
Re:As long as needed? (Score:2)
Water? (Score:4, Funny)
Is that your phone or are you happy to see me?
Re:Water? (Score:2)
Ofcourse I'm joking. Most likely the amount released by each phone would be very small compared to what comes out of a human.
Re:Water? (Score:1)
I'm sure it will be a target for the cause of global warming. Yeah, it's small, but it's adding to the overall green house gasses (assuming your guess of CO2 is right) and that small amount might be just enough to push us over the edge.
--
Q
Re:Water? (Score:2)
Re:Water? (Score:3, Informative)
But isn't that stuff we pump and dig out of the ground just plant/animal material made up of CO2 that those, once living, things obtained from the atmosphere when they were alive?
--
Q
Re:Water? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Water? (Score:3, Informative)
Apparently [fuelcellscanada.ca] it uses Formic acid [wikipedia.org]. "Things" would get rather itchy if the battery were to leak ;-)
Of course it begs the question on how the formic acid is produced, and whether it is a "green" process or not.
Re:I am going to help you out (Score:2)
[_] onmidelijk
[_] onmiddellijk
[_] onmiddelijk
[_] Ok, I get your point!
Re:Water? (Score:3, Funny)
"Is that your phone or were you happy to see me?"
Re:Water? (Score:2)
Re:Water? (Score:2)
Re:Water? (Score:2)
As long as needed? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:As long as needed? (Score:2)
As for "as long as needed," it could work. If they put a tiny backup battery in there so you could switch fuel cartriges without disconnecting your call, you could go on forever, without a large investment in expensive batteries.
Capacity is nice, but recharge speed is nicer (Score:5, Insightful)
From Ants to Apps (Score:5, Informative)
It is interesting that a fuel cell that is very technologically advanced uses formic acid, a chemical produced by one of the smallest of animals, the ant. How many other innovations can be derived from studying the chemical processes in nature?
Nowhere on the Tekion site does it say how long the cell lasts, but from the chart shown here: http://www.tekion.com/business/index.htm [tekion.com] you can derive that it will be at least twice as long as a conventional Li Ion battery. Excellent work!
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:2)
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:2)
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:2)
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:2)
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:5, Informative)
I'm thinking I'll go with the flammable myself..
Next year in the Top 10 Worst Tech Job : (Score:3, Funny)
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:2)
Just don't hit the wrong button when dialing and discharge it into your own face!
I dunno, Methanol is rough stuff too (Score:2)
Toxic by inhalation, ingestion or skin absorption. May be a reproductive hazard. Ingestion may be fatal. Risk of very serious, irreversible damage if swallowed. Exposure may cause eye, kidney, heart and liver damage. Chronic or substantial acute exposure may cause serious eye damage, including blindness. (emphasis theirs)
seems to me like you're pretty much screwed either way.
And Methanol is much much more flammable.
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:2)
Granted, this means you won't be refilling from a gallon jug -- you'll be locked in to some form of replaceable, well-sealed cartridges.
OTOH it WILL take a bit of time for their safety to be proven and accepted. Will they let you take these things on a plane, for instance?
(Even if refil cartridges are safe in normal use, could they be willfully forced open and used as some sort of weapon? I wo
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:5, Insightful)
And I think this is my point. We're talking about a supposedly convenient new thing... but it only works if you have access to carefully sealed, probably proprietary injectors of nastiness. A pocketful of Li-ion batteries would probably be just as easy to maintain, and still get you that long usage. Just develop some nice little solar handkerchief to unfold and charge them, or something. But I don't find much liberty in having to depend on a source of formic acid - however stabilized - for my phone to work. It's just like printer ink.
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:2)
If you want to have some fun take a discharged Li-ion battery, hook it up to an 18v transformer, then
let's get a grip? (Score:2)
Formic acid is an "organic" acid, a very close cousin to acetic acid, otherwise known as vinegar, and their acidities are not too dissimilar. (The pKa of formic acid is 3.75 and of acetic acid about 4.75.) So when you think of formic acid, you're best off thinking it's a lot like high
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:1)
Today I've been ejoying the pleasures or NETTLES (Score:2)
But batteries also contain scary stuff, and it's been a long time since I've had one leak on me.
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:2)
Now the real question is will I be able to get this through security at the airport and on to the airplane?
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:2)
Re:From Ants to Apps (Score:2)
Re:mod parent down (Score:2)
more detail, please (Score:5, Insightful)
And what the HELL is the deal with the light-blue on white typeface?
Re:more detail, please (Score:4, Informative)
Re:more detail, please (Score:2)
This changes the way we live (Score:2, Insightful)
A golden age of energy accessibility may be at hand, and could open up parts of the third world to modern technology too, if it has a readiliy available power so
Re:This changes the way we live (Score:5, Insightful)
You just need a big supply of "highly purified and modified formic acid" and off you go! This sounds suspiciously like inkjet cartridges to me.
Re:This changes the way we live (Score:2)
Dispose of it (Score:1)
Does anyone else find it odd... (Score:1)
Re:Does anyone else find it odd... (Score:1)
Power to the Future (Score:2)
Re:Power to the Future (Score:1)
Re:Power to the Future (Score:2)
Oh wonderful! (Score:2)
Soon, methanol or formic acid (Formira, or whatever the hell they call it) which were previously cheap indus
Whatever the source, I want standard sizes (Score:2)
We need a set
Formira? (Score:2)
Question (Score:2, Interesting)
Would it be possible to store one of these fuel cells for an extende period (months) without losing the "charge"? I haven't really read much about this particular property of fuel cells. In fact, I can't remember seeing it discussed.
Any ideas?
probably not (Score:2)
Batteries discharge because it's possible for the chemical reaction that discharges them to proceed without the external circuit being complete. It's just a lot slower. The problem is that the battery has all the chemicals it needs to run the reaction. You've just put this "valve" (the external circuit) that prevents a good flow of electrons from one side to the other.
In the case of the
Some facts about HCOOH fuel cells... (Score:5, Informative)
I was at AIChE 2005 [aiche.org] (Chemical Engineering stuff if you don't bother to click the link), and followed the fuel-cell topical. These cells did make a few appearances (also last year in Austin already).
The cell is being researched by professor Richard Masel [uiuc.edu] and his group. It has a relatively low power density, but that's enough for mobile electronics (no, it will not be usable on cars). The reason Masel's group is the only one working on these is that previous results discredited formic acid as a fuel, but Masel's group found out that they were using the wrong catalyst: platinum was being used (as in any other fuel cell), but for formic acid the correct one was actually palladium. Apparently, formic acid has much less problems in membrane permeation than methanol (that is, it does not burn without you using it), and has already passed tests of over 2500 consecutive hours of power production without failure.
Masel actually complained a bit that this very press release had been delayed one week, last week he could have had the press release at the same time of the conference, and could have mentioned the name of Motorola explicitly.
Another curious fact is that probably everybody of you reading has eaten some formic acid (it's in various foods), even if the high concentration at which it is used in fuel cells makes it unsuitable for a snack (it is actually going to be "burn" the skin).
For those interested, here are some abstracts: Present Status of Formic Acid Fuel Cells [confex.com], High Performing Air Breathing Passive Direct Formic Acid Fuel Cell (Dfafc) [confex.com], Magnetic Resonance Imaging (Mri) Microscopy of Operating Direct Formic Acid Fuel Cell (Dfafc) [confex.com], Formic Acid Electro-Oxidation by Pd: Particle Size Effects [confex.com]. Proceedings are however not free for the taking, and one has to buy the CD [omnipress.com] (135 $). No guarantee they contain anything more than the abstracts for the given papers, however.
Show me the money (Score:2)
These articles are about as useful as powerbook rumor threads. At least the Blacklight Power article was mildly educational.
Like clockwork, these things appear when people are looking for money. I imagine there will be a Ballard Power article up next.
What if it breaks? (Score:2)
All the red ants running on tiny treadmills inside the cell will be able to escape and will probably bite you!
Fuel Cells vs. LIPO / LION (Score:2)
Is there a comparison between expected fuel cell capacity (for a specific size) and LIPO/LION capacity?
Many thanks,
Michael
US tax dollars at work (Score:2)
http://www.batteriesdigest.com/broad_spedtrum.htm [batteriesdigest.com]
I've snipped the bit on formic acid cells: "The University of Illinois is investigating small formic acid micro fuel cells. These cells run successfully with formic acid concentrations between 5 and
Re:US tax dollars at work (Score:2)
Oh sheesh, you fuel cell fanboys (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Oh sheesh, you fuel cell fanboys (Score:2)
They use fire ant juice as fuel (Score:2)
It's interesting because hydrogen or methanol seems to be the preferred fuel, but these guys have chosen formic acid, which is produced by fire ants. Tekion claims the energy density is about double that of other FC technologies.
ExtremeFuelCells.com link [extremefuelcells.com]
Soon, as in any day now..... (Score:2)
It's all about energy density (Score:2)
A high-capacity battery is basi
Re:Looking forward to (Score:4, Insightful)
Would be nice wouldn't it? Unfortunatly, there are exactly three devices that can make this happen:
1) A portable solar generator and battery. This only works as long as the generator is able to produce more than ample power to cover periods where sunlight is unavailable and the panels are always facing the sun. e.g. The roof of a car. Plus you still have to charge devices in it.
2) Beaming power to devices. This is actually related to solar power as it reqires that a laser or maser hold a targetting lock on your device's power converter. Besides how tricky this is to implement, it's also dangerous to be broadcasting a number of lased transmissions in the multi-watt range.
3) Harnessing the radiation from radioisotopes. This is the most promising option as there are several types of radioisotope that are easy to contain, and no more dangerous than today's battery chemicals. This option could easily provide power in the 1-50 watt range, 24x7 for 10-30 years. The drawbacks to this method are a) radioisotopes are too expensive, b) the public has an irrational fear of anything "nukular", and c) the radioisotopes must be treated as hazardous waste (just like batteries) and disposed of properly.
I fully expect that option 3 will be embraced by future space explorers. It just wouldn't do to have equipment that can't survive long spans of time away from a charging station.
Re:Looking forward to (Score:1)
Re:Looking forward to (Score:1)
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/tmsb/stirling/doc/sti
Re:Looking forward to (Score:2)
So far no one has actually brought a miniturized version to market, though.
interesting thought, that (Score:2)
Ideally one would like a nuclear reaction that produces heat (or moderately-high temper
Re:interesting thought, that (Score:2)
??? Don't chose a material that produces significant amounts of gamma throughout it's deca
Re:interesting thought, that (Score:2)
(Pu-238 produces a host [lbl.gov] of gammas and X-r
Re:interesting thought, that (Score:2)
I didn't say find a type with no gammas. I said, find an isotope that only produces weak gamma. As long as you keep the gamma levels to far below background, you're not going to have a problem. All that RF radiation the phone is spewing would be a far greater health hazzard.
I don't see how
Re:interesting thought, that (Score:2)
But if you have a low intensity of gamma radiation, i.e. a low number of photons, then you have ipso facto a low intensity of energy production. The number of gammas is directly proportional to the number of distintegrations. That sounds like it just won't do if you want a compact source of lots of energy.
Yah, OK, making it a sphere reduces your shielding a bit. Some of your g
Re:interesting thought, that (Score:2)
I think you have a misunderstanding of radioisotopes. Sr90, for example, is another common isotope used in RTGs. It produces no Gamma radiation [lbl.gov] to speak of. Of course, it may produce gamma farther down the