Posted on 07/16/2008 10:17:07 AM PDT by DGHoodini
Nisshinbo Industries Inc. (TSE:3105) has worked with the Tokyo Institute of Technology to develop the technology to use carbon instead of expensive platinum as the electrode catalyst for fuel cells.
The company hopes to have a practical version of the new catalyst ready in fiscal 2009, and will start by commercializing a product for the electrodes of residential fuel cells. Later, it will develop and commercialize a version for automotive fuel cells.
(Excerpt) Read more at tradingmarkets.com ...
I wouldn't say that. You can bet your last dollar that gasoline will be the most used fuel in an automotive fuel cell. They'll just refine it better to remove all the sulpher so it doesn't poison the cell. Using gasoline in a fuel cell is ok, because it's not being burned,thus producing pollutants like carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons, sulfer dioxide etc. They will be just as 'clean' as ethanol or hydrogen.
Sulfur and lead poison Pt catalysts. Do they poison nanosphere carbon catalysts?
Orange county California runs the Bus system using CNG....from his source...
Also the Long Beach Harbor has a Fuel Station..
News:
T. Boone Pickens' $2 Billion Bet on Wind Energy
************************EXCERPT******************
By Jennifer Yousfi
T. Boone Pickens made his fortune in oil. But now the Dallas oilman and famed former corporate raider is betting $2 billion that he can have the same success with a new source of energy - wind.
Pickens Mesa Power LLP yesterday (Thursday) unveiled the first phase of an eventual $10 billion alternative energy project that has the potential to become the worlds largest wind farm.
"You find an oilfield, it peaks and starts declining, and youve got to find another one to replace it," Pickens, who once operated one of the largest independent oil-and-gas production companies in the country, said of the deal. "It can drive you crazy. With wind, theres no decline curve."
Mesa Power will purchase 667 wind turbines from General Electric Co. (GE). Each turbine can produce 1.5 megawatts of electricity. The first phase of the project will produce 1,000 megawatts, enough energy to power 300,000 homes. GE will begin delivering the turbines in 2010, and current plans call for the project to start producing power in 2011.
Not likely. The earth is literaly bursting at the seams with the stuff. Coal mining is here to stay. The coal mine in Northern Alberta because of it's purity and low sulpher content is used mainly for making carbon electrodes for smelting plant furnaces and a whole lot of other carbon based products.
fyi
T. Boone isn’t heavily invested in uranium mining or reactor fabricators.
He’ll push what’s profitable for himself.
Yeah?
Look bud, I checked the prices before I posted.
Find charcoal at a price significantly different than $300/ton, or premium gem quality natural diamonds at a price significantly different than $6000/carat (2268 carats/pound, 2204 pounds/metric ton - do the math) and get back to me.
>>
In 5 to 10 years we’ll have so many proven technologies to choose from we won’t know what to do.
<<
Nothing cures high prices like high prices.
Fuel cells, however, need “fuel”, and the issue then become price which translates to cost per KWh of fuel cell output.
If the carbon catalyst can be made cheap enough, they won't have to. If it would be cheaper to just replace the catalyst and recycle it with each oil change instead of removing the sulfur from the gasoline, then that's another option
And how we got to where we are....
thanks, bfl
“Best Danged Buggy Whip” ping. Thanks Ernest.
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