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To: raisinkane who wrote (308)7/17/1999 12:22:00 PM
From: Scoobah  Respond to of 542
 
Based on this attached news article, Hydrogen may have taken a giant leap forward,

biz.yahoo.com

Northwest Power Systems Develops Diesel
Fuel Processor

BEND, Ore., July 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Northwest Power Systems
(NPS), under contract to Sandia National Laboratories, a prime contractor to the U.S.
Department of Energy, announced today that it successfully tested a new fuel processor that
converts diesel into high-purity hydrogen. Without need for further purification, the hydrogen
was fed to a proton-exchange-membrane (PEM) fuel cell that produced electricity.

NPS developed the diesel fuel processor for use in fuel cell systems that can generate electricity
for use in homes, schools and businesses in remotely located villages of Alaska. The technology
breakthrough enhances NPS's prospects for rapid commercialization of fuel cells for both
stationary and portable applications, worldwide.

Northwest Power previously demonstrated a kerosene fuel processor for Arctic applications.
Both the diesel and kerosene fuel processors will be automated and tested this fall with fuel
cells that NPS purchases from independent manufacturers.

''Our longer-term objective is to complete all field testing of a series of fully-integrated fuel cell
systems for residential applications in rural Alaska in the year 2000,'' said Guggenheim. ''Diesel
is a bonus for us and Sandia because of the widespread distribution of this fuel in Alaska and
elsewhere.''

The successful diesel fuel processor demonstration culminated a week-long effort in which the
Company produced hydrogen from kerosene, bio-diesel, petroleum diesel and a proprietary
nonflammable liquid feedstock in a single fuel processor. The fuel processor is a proprietary
design that incorporates hydrogen purification as part of the fuel processor. The product
hydrogen from all four of the test fuels was greater than 99.8% pure with less than one part per
million (ppm) of carbon monoxide and less than one ppm of carbon dioxide. These contaminants
can poison a PEM fuel cell irreversibly. No further purification of the product hydrogen is
necessary with Northwest Power's fuel processor before passing it into any conventional PEM
fuel cell stack.

NPS already has developed a fuel processor that converts methanol to hydrogen. The Company
is developing ethanol, propane and, most recently, natural gas, models that provide needed
hydrogen for PEM fuel cell systems. PEM fuel cells run quietly with no combustion cycle and no
moving parts.

Founded in 1996, Northwest Power Systems is a subsidiary of IDACORP Technologies, Inc.,
Boise, Idaho.

SOURCE: Northwest Power Systems

Steve O
copower.com



To: raisinkane who wrote (308)7/17/1999 4:41:00 PM
From: Bread Upon The Water  Respond to of 542
 
Dear RK,

YOu may be right. I better revisit GLE's website. I've looked at so many different website's in the past 48 hours I may have gotten GLE's site mixed up with someone else's ---possibly Ballard's.

Thanks,

Bill