| WESTWOOD,
Mass.-- Acumentrics Corporation, a leading developer of solid-oxide fuel
cells and uninterruptible power supplies, announced today that they have
won a 2007 New England Innovation Award from SBANE, the Smaller Business
Alliance of New England.
"We are very proud." said Gary Simon,
President and CEO of Acumentrics. "New England has an amazing number of
innovative startups. Our top-tier universities and companies spin out quality
people and ideas all of the time. This was a tough competition."
The company was one of 7 winners
chosen from a pool of 171 applicants. Other winners include a portable
CT scan manufacturer, and a company that makes speech recognition software.
Acumentrics was the only alternative energy company to win this year.
Acumentrics manufactures 5000-watt
solid oxide fuel cell systems (SOFC) for power applications. They are also
developing combined-heat-and-power units (which are like boilers that produce
electricity) for the home market. Originally the company made power conditioners
and backup for the military market. They acquired a novel fuel cell technology
in 2000. Since then, they have increased the output of a single tube from
1 watt to 60 watts. Today they have over 30 fielded units, including ones
that power visitor's centers at Exit Glacier National Park in Alaska, and
Cuyahoga National Park in Ohio.
One of their key innovations was
making ceramic fuel cell technology shatter resistant. It is shatter resistant
because of its shape -- it is a tube, not a thin sheet as most others have
used --with a special composition of layers that prevents them from flaking
off. Solid oxide fuel cells must handle temperature swings from 20 to 800(degree)C.
Many other solid oxide fuel cells crack when they are cycled on and off,
because of thermal shock.
Another key innovation is they do
not require hydrogen or the hydrogen economy. The fuel cells run on natural
gas, propane, ethanol, diesel, biogas, and biodiesel --because they can
disassociate fuels in the tube, via in-situ reformation. While their systems
can run off hydrogen, too, customers prefer to work with logistic fuels
that are more affordable. Acumentrics fuel cells consume half as much fuel
as a comparable small-engine generator, per kW. An installation in Stockholm
is powered with carbon-neutral biogas.
Acumentrics' fuel cells can also
be built inexpensively, which was independently confirmed by the US Department
of Energy's SECA program in its rigorous tests for cost, reliability, durability,
efficiency, and start-stop cycling.
Today, all of the manufacturing is
done in Westwood, MA. The company starts with ceramic powders which are
formed into tubular cells, and finishes with fully-enclosed power systems
complete with computer controls.
In winning the award, Acumentrics
joins an illustrious list that includes companies like Genzyme, Stonyfield
Farm, The Mathworks, and iRobot.
About Acumentrics
Acumentrics' unique, durable, fuel-flexible
fuel cell technology is based on tubular ceramics. Over thirty of their
fuel cell power generators have been shipped and operated in the field.
The Company also sells rugged, uninterruptible power supplies (UPS) to
the military and other mission-critical markets. Acumentrics' Rugged-UPS
products work in extreme heat and cold, in wet and dry conditions, after
severe shaking and shock, even in blowing dirt and sand. www.acumentrics.com.
About SBANE
The Smaller Business Association
of New England is a nonprofit organization established in 1938 to promote
and protect small businesses. Its 1000 member companies in six states range
from sole-proprietorship service businesses and growing high technology
firms to 200-employee manufacturing plants. www.sbane.org
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