Korean tech makes hydrogen up to 30 times cheaper to produce — clean energy solved?

October 20th, 2008 by

With oil prices in free-fall and the world’s economies in the toilet, short-sighted governments and C02-denying GM execs will undoubtedly defer priority given to clean energies in the next round of fiscal budgets. Too bad, because Korea’s S&P Energy Research Institute has just issued a press release about a new discovery it claims puts the era of clean energy within reach. Dr. Sen Kim claims to have achieved the separation of Hydrogen with the same 90% (or greater) efficiency using just 0.1kwh of energy compared to the traditional 4 - 4.5kwh required using the ol’ electrolytic method. Dr. Kim postulates that “manufacturing the H2 by our method will lower the cost of H2 as much as 20 - 30 times” compared to electrolytic H2. That makes SPERI’s method suitable for H2 fuel production from say, an in-home hydrogen fueling station. So is this the solution to all of our clean energy concerns? Perhaps, but we’ve heard these economical hydrogen-generation claims before. Let’s wait for the claim to be more thoroughly vetted by bigger brains than our own before getting too hopeful.

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Posted in fuel, environment, clean energy, CleanEnergy, hydrogen, electrolysis, hydrogen fuel, HydrogenFuel, sen kim, SenKim | No Comments »

US Army turns to toy company to develop new weapon

July 24th, 2008 by

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We’re not quite sure how the pitch session went with this one, but it looks like the US Army was so impressed by toymaker Lund and Company’s Hydrogen Fuel Rocket that it decided to recruit the company to build a decidedly more lethal version of it. The new system, dubbed the Variable Velocity Weapon System, will apparently be able to be switched between lethal and non-lethal modes, and be loaded with rubber bullets, actual bullets, or other projectiles, which are fired by mixing a liquid or gaseous fuel with air in a combustion chamber. What’s more, the company says that the technology could be applied to any size weapon from a “handgun to a Howitzer,” and it says a demonstration version could be ready in as little as six months, with full production possible within 18 months, pending approval.

[Via Danger Room]

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Posted in army, weapon, us army, UsArmy, hydrogen, hydrogen fuel rocket, HydrogenFuelRocket, variable velocity weapon system, VariableVelocityWeaponSystem | No Comments »

ITM Power shows off in-home hydrogen fueling station

July 9th, 2008 by

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Hydrogen cars may not be quite as in favor as hybrids or all-electrics these days, but ITM Power looks to be doing its best to at least make ‘em a bit more convenient, with it now showing off a re-fueling station that it says could be installed in the home. Like similar systems, this one makes use of an electrolyzer to produce hydorgen gas from water and electricity, which can also be converted back into electricty with the aid of an internal combustion generator to provide power to the house. You’ll only be able to produce enough gas overnight to travel about 25 miles, however, but the company (like so many others) forsees higher-pressure refuelling units being installed in public places, which’d be able to provide enough gas to travel 100 miles. While there’s no firm word on a release for the home unit, ITM says it “could” be commercially availble as soon as this year, and it says the price could eventually get down to around £2,000 (or about $4,000) if they’re mass produced.

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Posted in hydrogen, hydrogen car, HydrogenCar, itm power, ItmPower | No Comments »

Honda FCX Clarity set to enter limited production and sale

June 16th, 2008 by

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If you’re in the market for a fuel efficient car, but you’ve been holding out for something a little more advanced than the Prius — your dreams may have just been answered. Honda announced today that it would begin producing limited quantities of its FCX Clarity hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles for sale in the US and Japan over the next few years. According to the automaker, it plans to offer around 200 of the zero-emission cars in the next three years, with a few dozen models expected on the road this year leased at around $600 a month. Said John Mendel, a senior vice president at Honda, “It’s an especially significant day for American Honda as we plant firm footsteps toward the mainstreaming of fuel cell cars.” Now all they have to do is get more than 3 fueling stations out there and we’ll be all set.

Read - Honda rolls out fuel cell car
Read - Honda starts producing next-generation fuel cell car

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Posted in fuel cell, FuelCell, hybrid, fcx, fcx clarity, FcxClarity, honda, hydrogen, hydrogen fuel cell, HydrogenFuelCell | No Comments »

Samsung aiming for water-powered cellphones by 2010

April 18th, 2008 by

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We’ve seen quite a few prototype fuel-cell powered mobile devices, but Samsung’s upping the ante by predicting that we’ll all be running our phones on water by 2010. The company says it’s developed a method to generate hydrogen by exposing water to metal, but the details are a little shaky — we’re guessing it’s similar to the system used in the HydroPak generator, but it’s hard to tell. Still, we’ve got no reason to doubt Samsung’s engineers, who say the system currently provides about 10 hours of use, or about five days of average cell usage, and will eventually allow users to simply top off and go. That’s every traveler’s dream — let’s get this to market, Sammy.

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Posted in samsung, fuel cell, FuelCell, water, water power, water powered, WaterPower, WaterPowered, hydrogen | No Comments »

First manned flight using hydrogen battery doesn’t cause rain, only tears

April 4th, 2008 by

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You’re looking at the world’s first manned flight powered by a hydrogen battery. Boeing’s prop-driven aircraft set the lone pilot aloft for about 20 minutes at a speed of 100-kilometres (62 miles) an hour at an altitude of about 1,000 meters. The 800-kilogram (1,760-pound) craft with a 16.3-meter (51-foot) wingspan is capable of flying for about 45 minutes under the power of its hydrogen fuel cells — the airplane’s batteries provided an additional boost for takeoff. The fuel cells harvest the energy produced by the chemical transformation of hydrogen and oxygen into water — that makes the craft clean as well as near silent. Unfortunately, the technology is nowhere near the point of powering commercial aircraft. At best, the fuel-cells could act as a secondary power source… in another 20 years.

 

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Posted in battery, airplane, plane, boeing, hydrogen, hydrogen fuel cell, HydrogenFuelCell | No Comments »

QuantumSphere speaks of homemade hydrogen

March 7th, 2008 by

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We’ll be honest, we’re not getting ourselves all riled up about this just yet — after all, it’s not like QuantumSphere is the first (nor the last) company to teeter on announcing a legitimate “solution” to ditching gasoline. Nevertheless, said startup has reportedly figured out a way to “make hydrogen at home from distilled water and ultimately bring the cost of hydrogen fuel cells in line with that of fossil fuels.” More specifically, the outfit claims to have “perfected the manufacture of highly reactive catalytic nanoparticle coatings that could up the efficiency of electrolysis, the technique that generates hydrogen from water.” Unbelievable though that may sound, it’s still looking to unveil a battery using its own technology later this year, so we’ll just wait and see what becomes of that initiative before bidding gas stations adieu for good.

[Via Autoblog, thanks Sean]

 

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Posted in fuel cell, FuelCell, energy, nanotechnology, battery, alternative energy, alternative fuel, AlternativeEnergy, AlternativeFuel, hydrogen, QuantumSphere | No Comments »

New solar cell cuts out the middle man, harvests hydrogen from water

February 18th, 2008 by

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Some Penn State researchers are taking a cue from nature and have built the first solar cell that can effectively split water to harvest the hydrogen. While the technology and efficiency of electricity-gathering solar cells has been humming on nicely, cells that can pull hydrogen out of water directly (instead of using solar-harvested electricity to do it) have found that the catalysts conducive to separating hydrogen and oxygen are usually pretty good at putting the two gases right back together again. The folks at Penn State have now developed a process that more closely mimics the photosynthesis process in plants, and while we won’t pretend to understand all the nitty gritty of dye usage and other such nonsense, we do know that such a system could eventually attain 15% or so efficiency, providing a nice and clean way to gather power for that fuel cell car of the future.

[Image courtesy of MTU.edu]

 

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Posted in solar, fuel cell, FuelCell, penn state, PennState, solar cell, SolarCell, hydrogen | No Comments »

Hydrogen fuel cell-powered MOTOSLVR L7 prototype gets pictured

February 16th, 2008 by

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Right around a month ago, we heard that Angstrom Power had managed to stuff some of its sophisticated hydrogen fuel cells into a MOTOSLVR L7. That prototype, friends, is what you see about. Unfortunately, we’re no closer to realizing when this stuff will actually escape the proverbial beta stage, and for whatever it’s worth, we’re also no closer to feeling absolutely safe with one of these next to our melon (though existing alternatives don’t have the greatest track record either).

 

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Posted in motorola, moto, fuel cell, FuelCell, prototype, green, alternative energy, AlternativeEnergy, hydrogen, l7, motoslvr, slvr | No Comments »

Samsung partners with HydroGen to distribute fuel cell power plants

January 17th, 2008 by

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Trust us, this ain’t the first time we’ve heard “Samsung” and “fuel cell” mentioned in the same breath, but signing up with another firm to be its “sole and exclusive distributor” of fuel cell power plants sounds pretty serious. Sure enough, Sammy has inked an agreement with US-based HydroGen, and will soon be selling its phosphoric acid fuel cell (PAFC) power plants in Asia, the Middle East and in other unspecified regions. Reportedly, Samsung is planning to use HydroGen’s technologies to “supply heat and electricity from fuel cell power plants to Korean chemical plants or energy providers and expand its business into the hydrogen fuel cell market.” Yeah, we’d say locking things in with a hydrogen fuel cell manufacturer ’til 2015 is a pretty good way to accomplish that.

[Via Chosun]

 

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Posted in samsung, fuel cell, FuelCell, green, alternative energy, AlternativeEnergy, hydrogen, PAFC | No Comments »

Angstrom Power touts hydrogen fuel cells for cellphones

January 15th, 2008 by

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There’s certainly no shortage of companies out there trying to provide unconventional means of keeping your cellphone powered, and it looks like you can now add yet another ever-recurring bit of tech to the list, with Angstrom Power now touting its hydrogen fuel cells for cellphones. While they’re obviously still quite a ways from landing in your handset, Angstrom does seem to be a good deal further than the concept stage, with them having already managed to cram some of the cells into a MOTOSLVR L7. That transplant, Angstrom says, gives the phone twice the juice of a standard battery and lets it recharge in just ten minutes. Just don’t look for those anytime before 2010, which is when Angstrom “hopes” the first commercial phones equipped with the fuel cells will be available.

[Via Physorg]

 

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Posted in fuel cell, FuelCell, angstrom power, AngstromPower, hydrogen | No Comments »

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