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Researchers integrate fuel cells on chip level

MUNICH, Germany — A research group of the Freiburg university (Germany) and semiconductor vendor Micronas AG has integrated a fuel cell array on a chip. The device could power autonomous microsystems, also known as ‘Smart dust’.

The chip contains 42 microscale fuel cells on a CMOS device plus four cells to power the control circuitry necessary to keep the output voltage of 3.3 V constant. While the semiconductor structures have been manufactured using a standard CMOS process, the fuel cell elements — a palladium layer for H2 storage, cathode and membrane — have been added in a post-process spin-on, explained Karl Hoffmann who oversees the project for Micronas.

According to Hoffmann, a challenge was to intelligently interconnect the fuel cells in a way that allows the control circuitry to keep the output as stable as possible during the element’s life time. “With several elements in parallel and in series, it is much easier to keep voltage and current constant,” Hoffmann said.

With a lifetime of about one year at nominal load in the triple-digit microwatt range, the device could eventually power smart autonomous systems in applications where no conventional power source is available. Energy harvesting devices are not regarded as competing with the chip-level fuel cell, Hoffmann said. “They rather can complement each other,” he said. “A fuel cell could be used as a power buffer for periods when energy harvesting methods don’t generate enough power.”

Sounds like space applications? Rather not, Hoffmann said. The researchers have more down-to-earth applications in mind. Building monitoring, for instance.

October 3, 2009 - 12:44 PM No Comments

Taiwan unveils hydrogen-powered mobile phone chargers

TAIPEI–Taiwanese researchers said Friday they have developed hydrogen-powered mobile phone chargers, in a development that could boost the island’s efforts to become a player in green technologies.

The device can recharge a mobile phone battery in two hours without being plugged, according to scientists at the Industrial Technology Research Institute in north Taiwan’s Hsinchu city.

“Hydrogen is a recyclable material. The device is energy-efficient and will help protect the environment,” said Tsau Fanghei, a researcher at the institute.

“We will continue to improve the invention. We hope the hydrogen-powered device can replace current cell phone recharge systems in 2012.”

Ma Hwong-wen, an environmental scientist at the National Taiwan University, said the invention appeared to be breaking new ground.

“It is new,” Ma said. “Hydrogen, in theory, will produce no hazard to the environment.”

The charger will be key to the Taiwan government’s endeavour of carving out a space for itself in future energy generation, according to Yeh Hui-ching, director of the economics ministry’s Bureau of Energy.

“The government hopes to acquire a slot in the global green energy industry’s production chain with the hydrogen fuel cell technologies,” Yeh said, according to Taiwan’s Central News Agency.

Taiwan is under pressure to develop new energy sources, as it imports about 98 percent of its energy.

October 3, 2009 - 12:08 PM No Comments