. 24/7 Space News .
An 'Off The Wall' Idea

a micro fuel cell

Boston MA - Apr 21, 2004
"The goal is to get off the wall," says Professor Sanjeev Mukerjee of Northeastern's chemistry department when he talks about his work developing long-lasting, non-polluting fuel cells.

Getting "off the wall," he explains, means no more plugging in, no more cell phone battery chargers, and no more looking for an outlet for laptops, digital cameras or PDAs. Mukerjee and the firm Protonics have already been contracted by the military to develop portable fuel cells for soldiers in the field.

In a future that may be as close as ten years away, Mukerjee envisions small, light, portable cartridges that will easily generate 5,000 hours of power � a far cry from today's rechargeable batteries. And when the cartridge, powered by clean hydrogen or methanol, is empty, he says, it can be tossed and replaced without ever needing a wall socket.

Mukerjee is a big dreamer, and his dreams are moving rapidly toward reality in the form of two recent start-ups that are putting his ideas into practice. The young firms, Protonics Corp and Integrated Fuel Cell Inc., are working with Mukerjee to create different kinds of fuel cells, including the much-vaunted hydrogen fueled car.

That dream may be decades away, says Mukerjee, but they are much closer, he believes, to powering small, personal devices with disposable cartridges. The fuel cells that Protonics is developing for the U.S. military would power the high-tech gear like GPS and night-vision goggles that rapidly suck battery power and weigh down the troops.

Integrated Fuel Cell, Inc. is working on an automotive fuel cell, concentrating on methanol as the reactive ingredient. Methanol, like hydrogen, has no polluting by-products. It is extracted from coal or natural gas, and has the advantage, at about 46 cents per gallon, of being far cheaper than oil and independent of oil-related politics.

Related Links
Northeastern University
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Renewable Energy Promotes US Job Growth Better Than Fossil Fuels
Berkeley - Apr 15, 2004
Investing in renewable energy such as solar, wind and the use of municipal and agricultural waste for fuel would produce more American jobs than a comparable investment in the fossil fuel energy sources in place today, according to a report issued today (Tuesday, April 13) by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley.







  • Airplane Wings That Change Shape Like A Bird's Have Scales Like A Fish
  • NASA, U.S. Coast Guard Partner To Track, Protect Aircraft Parts
  • NASA Struggles To Alter Its Culture
  • Send Your Business Card Into Space

  • The Case Of The Electric Martian Dust Devils
  • Martian Biology Hanging By A Thread?
  • Missoula Crater In Sight
  • Red Planet, Misread Planet or, Wet Dreaming on Mars

  • ILS To Launch 3 Satellites For SES Global Companies
  • Shuttle-Derived Vehicle: Shuttle-Derived Disaster
  • NASA's X-43A Flight Results in Treasure Trove of Data
  • The Myth of Low-Thrust Propulsion

  • NASA And France Pick Up Rhythm For Calipso Launch
  • Moody Pacific Unleashes Another Climate Mystery
  • Dell Contributes 448 Gflops Of Computing Power To Online Database Of Earth Images
  • Ocean Fertilization With Iron To Foster Carbon Dioxide Eating Plankton

  • Hubble Fails To Spot Suspected Sedna Moon
  • Life Beneath The Ice In The Outer Solar System?
  • Gravity Rules: The Nature of Planethood
  • Enigma Of Uranus Solved At Last

  • China's Lunar Probe Will Launch On Long March 3A
  • Cornell Astronomer Explains To Congress The Economics Of Lunar Water Supplies
  • Arizona Planetary Scientists Call For Lunar Exploration
  • Smart-1 Eclipse Period Over

  • Armstrong Reflects On A New Visions For Space Exploration
  • Sunny lunar mountain good site for base
  • Lunar Convoys As An Option For A Return To The Moon
  • NASA Planning Steps To Moon, Mars

  • Trimble R7 Tracks New Block IIR-M GPS Satellite Before Launch
  • XM Radio Introduces Satellite Update Service For Vehicle Navigation
  • Latest GPS Satellite Declared Fully Operational
  • Digital Angel Offers Cattle-Tracking Products in Canadian Market

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement