| No matter
how portable gadgets become there's a time when they all must come back
to earth: recharging time.
As a result, the quest for longer
battery life still occupies much development time. For proof of this just
look at new technologies for mobile devices. Whether they are screens,
processors, storage or other components, they usually share the advantage
of lower power consumption.
Much of the development work is focused
on making batteries based on current technologies, such as lithium ion,
last longer, and an increasing amount of time is being spent looking into
new technologies such as fuel cells.
"Lithium ion has been improving at
a rate of about 9 per cent per year since a decade ago when Sony introduced
the first" battery based on this technology, co-founder of A123 Systems,
a start-up that's developed a high-power battery, Ric Fulop, said. The
company has attracted investments from Qualcomm and Motorola. Although
it's initially focusing on high-current devices such as power tools, it
sees opportunities in the electronics sector.
Fulop says lithium ion capacities
have increased from around 2.2Ah (ampere hours) a few years ago to about
2.6Ah, and there's room for continued improvement.
Japan's Matsushita Battery Industrial
said earlier this year that it's working with Intel on a lithium ion battery
that will have a capacity of 2.9Ah. Scheduled to be available in April,
it should keep a laptop running for about eight hours.
However, there are limits to the
technology, Fulop said.
"You are reaching the limits and
it's not going to get much better," he said. Making a better battery means
messing with materials and that's a battle against nature. "You don't have
the same capability with materials science as Moore's Law. That's why the
rate of improvement has only been 9 per cent per year." Companies also
are working on speedier recharging so devices are up and running again
faster.
Toshiba has developed a prototype
lithium ion battery that can absorb about 80 per cent of the battery's
total power capacity in about one minute. That's much faster than the typical
charging rate of 2 per cent to 3 per cent of total capacity per minute.
The new battery could make it possible to quickly bring a dead laptop back
to life.
Although lithium ion remains the
king in portable gadgets, one of the most talked-about new technologies
is the fuel cell. These create electricity from a simple reaction, typically
that of a methanol and water mixture and air. They're generating interest
because they can provide a relatively large amount of power from a small
amount of inexpensive fuel and are environmentally friendlier than other
batteries.
Both Toshiba and NEC have demonstrated
direct methanol fuel cells (DMFC) for use with laptop computers. A prototype
unveiled by Toshiba at this year's Cebit show in Germany could power a
small laptop for 10 hours before it required a recharge in the form of
a squirt of methanol, similar to the way a cigarette lighter is refueled.
The Toshiba DMFC can provide about 20 watts of power, as can a similar
prototype from NEC.
Lenovo Group and Sanyo Electric also
are working on a DMFC -based prototype, but plan to combine the fuel cell
with a conventional lithium ion battery. The fuel cell keeps the battery
charged when the computer isn't working under load, and the battery releases
this power when the system demands more than the 12 watts the DMFC can
provide. Such a hybrid power source offers the best initial solution for
DMFCs until technology improves, Sanyo said.
DMFCs also win over lithium ion in
other areas, president and CEO of PolyFuel, Jim Balcom, said. The company
supplies DMFC membranes to many of the major companies in the field. "Lithium
ion batteries don't do very well from a durability aspect," he said. "Most
tend to decline to the point where, after a year or two, the energy capacity
drops to about 80 per cent of the original level and then falls quite steeply."
PolyFuel has tested DMFCs based on its membranes that last 5000 hours and
is working on membranes that last longer.
Choosing hydrogen
Not all fuel cell research is focused
on DMFCs. Some companies are looking at fuel cells that use hydrogen instead
of methanol, because they can deliver more power relative to size. This
can be measured as the energy density.
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone's
(NTT) prototype hydrogen fuel cell has an energy density of 200 milliwatts
per square centimeter: That means about nine hours of talk time for a 3G
phone from the device, which is about the size of a pack of playing cards.
In contrast, the DMFCs demonstrated
with laptop PCs have an energy density of about 70 milliwatts per square
centimetre, and lithium ion batteries used in modern cell phones are about
160 milliwatts per square centimetre, according to NTT.
The high energy density also has
pushed Canon into hydrogen fuel-cell development for digital still cameras.
It has a prototype that matches the power of lithium ion batteries; the
company's research goal is a fuel cell that offers between three and five
times this amount of power.
Despite all this work and many demonstrations
of working prototypes, fuel cells are not mere months away from commercialisation.
"One of the biggest challenges is
lack of standardisation," research manager for Frost & Sullivan's power
supplies and batteries group, Sara Bradford, said. Major vendors are using
different types and amounts of fuel to power batteries of different sizes.
"This all just adds to the confusion
for the average consumer," she said.
Talks have begun on issues such as
common refills, but agreement is yet to be reached. There also are regulatory
hold-ups. Methanol is a highly flammable liquid, and carrying it on aircraft
is highly regulated. As current regulations stand, it's impossible for
passengers to carry on DMFCs - let alone use them in aircraft cabins. Hydrogen
also has its problems, because the fuel has to be stored in compressed
canisters, which require clearance for air travel, so commercialization
is on hold. The International Air Transport Association is working on regulations
that would allow DMFCs to be carried or used on planes, but they aren't
expected to be complete until at least 2007.
Commercialisation for military or
industrial use would come before consumer use, with the military leading
the pack, Bradford said. "They have the means to do it. Obviously, they
have a lot of money to invest, but it also really revolves around the demand."
PolyFuel's Balcom agreed. He expected
to see military and industrial fuel cells on the market in 2006 and 2007,
with the first consumer products on sale a year later. Start-up Medis Technologies
said it has a fuel cell that doesn't face the same regulatory or standardization
problems. The company has developed a disposable alkaline-based fuel cell
that it says is efficient, safe and inexpensive. It hopes to commercialise
the cell, which will cost around $US8 in bulk, in early 2006.
The device won't replace the existing
rechargeable batteries in portable devices, but is intended to be used
as a portable recharging station for times when the battery dies and a
power socket isn't nearby. The Medis unit can charge an average cell phone
about six to eight times, or provide power for 20-30 hours of talk time
before its fuel is spent. It can't be replenished.
But no matter what happens with battery
technology, perhaps the life of a laptop will never move much beyond eight
hours. "The notebook guys don't want to give you more than eight hours,"
A123 Systems' Fulop said.
Battery lifetime is usually decided
ahead of time, because PC makers fix the power consumption and battery
life of their machines before they shop for a battery. Changes come only
in the amount of power consumed per hour as better and more-energy-hungry
components are fitted into the machines.
- Nancy Weil contributed to this
report.

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