Email
Password   Forgotten?
Remember me Register
Marketplace
Business Directory
Discussion Forums
Spec-Checker
Industry News
This week's news
Media releases
Fork talk
Industry profiles
Safety first
Cargo chat
Product watch
Your focus
Search news archive
Send your news
Events Calendar
Jobs & Resumes
Photo Galleries


Home | About us | Advertise with us | Tell an associate | Contact us | Site map | Help 
Search    Options 
Your tools:
NEWS : Full Story
Newsletter #316 (View other news stories)

Patented plastic could hasten energy adoption


SOUTHAMPTON, United Kingdom
Thursday, 28 Jun 2007
Bac2's technical director Graham Murray holds bipolar plate made from ElectroPhen
Bac2, the manufacturer of an electrically conductive polymer used in fuel cell stacks, will open new offices and a test laboratory in Southampton, UK, in August.

Its ElectroPhen polymer has patents pending in Europe, US and Japan, and is used to create bipolar plates and end caps for polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) fuel cell stacks.

These parts constitute about 30% of the cost of PEM fuel cell stacks, says Bac2 marketing director James Lewis. The plates connect individual fuel cells and provide connections to the outside world, similar to connectors in batteries.

Lewis says lower cost raw materials and cheaper manufacturing techniques are used to produce ElectroPhen, which is being developed commercially. He adds that the measured conductivity of ElectroPhen plates is ahead of Bac2's competitors, contributing to higher performing fuel cells.

The new test laboratory will enable Bac2 to accelerate development of customised versions of ElectroPhen. Customisation is necessary because each fuel cell design has different plate requirements with respect to the balance of conductivity, hydrogen permeability, hydrophobicity and mechanical strength.

"The premises represent a major step up from current facilities - desk space at SetSquared and lab access at Portsmouth University.

"Bac2 will be able to develop ElectroPhen variants, design and build evaluation fuel cells and test them on a single site [at Millbrook Technology Campus in Southampton]," says Lewis.

He says ElectroPhen is more flexible and robust than alternative materials used to make plates for PEM fuel cell stacks.

"By comparison, competitors produce composite plates using electrically insulating resins to bind together conductive particles like graphite." ElectroPhen can also be used in other applications in electrical and electronic industries.

Air-breathing fuel cell created by University students
Fuel cell, a clean energy source that has water as its waste product, could eventually power cars, buses, laptops, mobile phones and even homes and offices. At present, cost-efficiency is an issue.

Bac2 CEO Mike Stannard says: "The cost and performance advantages it (ElectroPhen) offers can accelerate the adoption of fuel cell technology for powering everything from notebook computers to buses and cars."

PEM fuel cell stacks, compared to other fuel cell types, are suitable for high-volume applications. For example, they are suitable for portable electronics like computers, mp3 players and mobile phones, and automotive applications like forklifts and cars.

Other types, like solid oxide fuel cells, are aimed at large size power generation for buildings.

Engineering students at the University of Portsmouth recently conducted a successful final-year project to create an innovative "air-breathing fuel cell" using ElectroPhen plates. The fuel cell used oxygen from the air that passed through the stack and hydrogen channelled through the bipolar plates. Other fuel cells use pressurised oxygen.
Discuss Forkliftaction.com News stories in the Discussion Forums!
CURRENT NEWS

News story

1. Jungheinrich: Global demand marginally better
2. E-P opens China’s largest warehouse forklift factory
3. Manitex reports 2009 ups and downs
4. Grupo Laeisz now supports Heli brand
5. Konecranes closes factory, finalises acquisition
6. Autoquip acquires American Lifts
7. Drive pedestrians to forklift operator training
8. Watts Tyres sold to Premia Group
9. Trade show exceeds most expectations
10. Swedish inventor develops versatile forklift
11. LFTS sold to Linde Sterling
12. Briefs
13. Narrow Aisle Flexi adds VNA truck to range
14. Werner Global Logistics opens in Australia
15. NZ port rail link on schedule
16. Improving safety for stevedores
17. Businesses warned of safety scam
18. Supply chain project on cards
19. Brighter outlook for Christmas and beyond




Media release

1. Somerset Capital…Leading the way in the field of industrial equipment financing….Today, Tomorrow, and into the Future
2. TCM New Dealer Announcement - Aurora Lift Truck Service
3. Premia Group Limited acquire Watts Tyre Group
4. Automotive component supplier cuts forklift fleet costs with Flexi
5. Lifetime Contribution Award Presented to Cascade Corporation President
6. Nissan Forklift Corporation Announces its New Vice President of Sales & Marketing
7. Fleetman Consulting Inc. | Representing the Interests of the End User


Text Ad

1. Interesting findings about the effect of online advertising
2. Agents, dealers wanted


Safety First

1. Richard Shore: Have your training risks been properly assessed?


Product Watch

1. APEX 11- New A-Lift, 3 wheels driven multidirectional Forklift truck with travel mast.
2. CBD10A ---Semi Electric pallet Truck from Ningbo Ruyi
3. EquipmentFX- Ever heard of a marketing company with a “pay-for-performance” program?
©Forkliftaction.com
Privacy policy
Related links
Site map
About us
Marketplace | Business Directory | Discussion Forums | Spec-Checker | Industry News | Events Calendar | Jobs & Resumes | Photo Galleries
Forkliftaction.com – PO Box 1439, Milton QLD 4064, Australia
Include and Exclude search categories:
Marketplace
Business Directory
News Stories
Discussion Forums
Spec Checker
Events
Tenders
Jobs and Resumes