Laptop Methanol Fuel Cell

July 18th, 2008 by john

PolyFuel, a Mountain View, California company, announced this week that it has integrated its methanol fuel cell technology into a Lenovo Thinkpad T40 laptop computer. According to the company’s press release:

In PolyFuel’s prototype, the power supply features a detachable fuel cartridge – about the size of a deck of cards – that can be swapped out while the computer continues to run. Long-distance travelers, or others needing continuous, unconnected, easily portable power for their notebooks, would simply carry spare cartridges in their pocket or purse – a someday common practice that has already been approved for commercial aircraft by the various regulatory bodies around the world.

What are the Advantages?

From an environmental perspective, a methanol fuel cell is a much better technology than the lithium ion batteries we use today. Methanol is a renewable fuel, and the cells can be made from biodegradable or easily recycled materials. While the batteries in today’s laptops can be recycled, it is a much more costly process.

But, as with many things green, the methanol fuel cell has other advantages over the batteries it replaces: with current technology, they last three times longer than a lithium ion battery; in the future that may increase to as much as 10 times. They are also much lighter than batteries, so the traveling worker now has a power source that will last for a long haul flight, and make the hand luggage lighter (that alone is a big deal if you travel regularly with a laptop!). Since they’re also refillable rather than rechargeable, should it run out mid flight you just need to swap the methanol cartridge to keep working.

Disadvantages?

Well, like any new technology there are likely to be some issues for the early adopters. Getting through security checks at the airport with a new feature like this might take some patience (ask the folks with the solid state drive version of the Mac Air).

Being away from home and running out of methanol might be a problem too. Plugging in for a recharge is usually possible today where ever you are likely to find yourself with a laptop, but buying replacement methanol cartridges might be harder, especially when you get in at midnight after a delayed flight.

As this technology becomes more common though, these problems will go away and we’ll all be enjoying laptops that last for days on a lightweight power source.

[Via GreenUpgrader]

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