dailynews.yahoo.com
Friday December 28 2:05 PM ET Japan Bets on Fuel Cells for Tech-Toy Power By Eriko Amaha
TOKYO (Reuters) - Tetsuya Mizoguchi, president of Toshiba Corp's mobile communications company, keeps all his contact numbers, schedules and even meeting memos in a sleek personal digital assistant.
As he showed off the Toshiba-made gadget to reporters, it started flickering. The battery was low.
``I've been using this all day,'' he says, frowning. ``You don't understand the inconvenience of recharging until you actually use them. I have no time to go back to my desk to recharge this.''
He and others in Japan are betting on fuel cells, 21st century versions of the bulky batteries used to power spacecraft in the 1960s, providing the solution.
As portable electronic devices become lighter, smaller and more power hungry, calls for more powerful and longer-lasting batteries increase.
Fuel cells create electrical energy through the reaction of hydrogen and oxygen.
Japanese electronics firms have developed prototypes for fuel-cell batteries to power the smallest of electronic devices for longer -- and only need refueling not recharging.
Mizoguchi says Toshiba hopes to make a fuel-cell battery that turns methanol directly into electricity and could be available to the public within two years.
Sony Corp (news - web sites), the world's biggest electronics group, is developing a fuel-cell battery that uses carbon molecules to allow it to function at extreme temperatures.
3G BOOST
These days, the bulky fuel-cell batteries that once powered spacecraft, are mainly used to supply electricity in buildings.
Japan's largest maker of mobile handsets, NEC Corp, is collaborating with two Japan government research bodies to develop a fuel-cell battery that runs on methanol and uses nanotechnology.
Nanotechnology involves making or manipulating substances at minute levels of only a few nanometers -- or billionths of a meter.
NEC says the invention's energy capacity will be 10 times that of a regular lithium battery, allowing people to use a current-generation mobile phone for a month without recharging, or work on a laptop computer for a full day. Yoshimi Kubo, senior manager at NEC Laboratories, predicts high-speed third-generation (3G) cell phones, which require a lot of power to transmit data, may be one of the biggest beneficiaries of fuel-cell technology.
``People will be spending more time on 3G phones (than standard models). They will look up restaurants or shops, and download data,'' he says.
Japan's largest mobile operator, NTT DoCoMo (news - web sites) Inc, launched the world's first 3G mobile service in October, offering face-to-face communication.
But users of the service are shackled by a battery that allows only 100 minutes of continuous talk or 70 minutes of video-conferencing.
``I think telecom carriers are feeling a sense of crisis because 3G and even current-generation phones do not have enough power. So they say they want fuel-cell batteries at all cost,'' says Kubo, who aims to make NEC's fuel-cell products commercial by 2005.
FLEXIBILITY
Kubo said that because of the liquid fuel, the shape of NEC's battery could be flexible, making it easier to fit into compact devices.
Also, with methanol costing about 40 to 50 yen (31 to 39 cents) per liter, the cost of making the battery could be lowered to about the same price as a lithium battery, he adds. It is estimated that lithium batteries are used in 80 percent of all laptops and 50 percent of cell phones in the world.
Tomohide Kazama, a researcher at the Nomura Research Institute, says that although fuel-cell batteries are being developed for cars and homes, they are better suited for portable devices, such as laptops and camcorders.
``Users would not have to carry around a recharger with them and fuel could be sold at convenience stores,'' he told a seminar held by electronics trade magazine Nikkei Micro Device.
Kazama says there are some obstacles needed to be overcome before fuel batteries will see everyday use.
For one, methanol is a regulated drug and law changes would be needed to make the substance widely available.
But NEC's Kubo remains optimistic.
``Fuel cells are like lighters and there should be a way to solve these problems,'' he adds.
Email this story - View most popular | Printer-friendly format Archived Stories by Date: Dec 27 Dec 26 Dec 25 Dec 24 Dec 23 Dec 22 Dec 21 Dec 20 Dec 19 Dec 18 Dec 17 Dec 16 Dec 15 Dec 14 Dec 13 Dec 12 Dec 11 Dec 10 Dec 09 Dec 08 Dec 07 Dec 06 Dec 05 Dec 04 Dec 03 Dec 02 Dec 01 Nov 30 Nov 29 Nov 28
News Resources Message Boards: Post/Read Msgs (2 msg Dec 28, 3:11 PM ET) Conversations: Start a live discussion News Alerts: DoCoMo | Sony Corp More Alerts: News Bulletins, News, Mobile, Stocks
ADVERTISEMENT Weekly Specials · Rent all the DVDs you want, $20 a month- Try FREE! · Give the gift of USA TODAY and save 33% · Search for Free College Money · FREE credit report & trial membership! · The Easiest Way To Get A Home Loan · Health Insurance-compare & shop online · Win Sony merchandise!
ADVERTISEMENT
Search News Advanced Search: Stories Photos Audio/Video Full Coverage Home Top Stories Business Tech Politics World Local Entertainment Sports Op/Ed Science Health Full Coverage
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright © 2001 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. Copyright © 2001 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. Questions or Comments Privacy Policy - Terms of Service |