This year's
CeBIT computer
trade show will see the unveiling of the world's first mass production fuel cell
for laptop computers.
Antig
Technology and AVC
Corporation claim to have developed a fully functioning fuel cell that can
fit into the DVD drive bay of a standard laptop.
Taiwanese manufacturers, which produce the majority of the world's laptops,
will start production later this year.
The device runs on disposable capsules of methanol and uses a chemical
reaction to produce an electrical charge. The companies claim that one methanol
capsule will provide 45w of power, enough for eight hours of normal laptop use.
Being free from a power point comes at a price, however: the power generation
unit weighs around 1.7kg, which would double the weight of some laptops. No
pricing information has yet been released.
Fuel cells have had a rocky road in the IT industry. Many companies have
experimented with the technology for laptops, and
Toshiba is developing a
system for media players.
Olympus
signed up with British researchers at
QinetiQ last year to
develop fuel cell technology for its camera range.
Antig and AVC have declined to reveal which laptops will get the fuel cells
first, but Lenovo
and Dell both source their
laptops from Taiwan.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article