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Monash fuels the next generation of Hybrid cars1 August 2008
Monash University's Professor Doug MacFarlane from the Australian Centre for Electromaterials Science (ACES) said the discovery was probably the most important development in fuel cell technology in the last 20 years. "The benefits for the motoring industry and for motorists are that the new design removes the need for platinum, which acts as the catalyst and is currently central to the manufacturing process," Professor MacFarlane said. "Our reliance on platinum is making the likelihood of using fuel cells in everyday passenger cars, increasingly improbable." "The cost of the platinum component alone of current fuel cells for a small car with a 100kW electric engine is more than the total cost of an 100kW gasoline engine. Also current annual world production of platinum is only sufficient for about 3 million 100kW vehicles, less than one-twentieth of the current annual global production of vehicles." The new design fuel cell has been tested for periods of up to 1500 hours continuously using hydrogen as the fuel source. Professor Maria Forsyth, Director of ACES at Monash said testing has shown no sign of material degradation or deterioration in performance. The tests also confirmed that oxygen conversion rates are comparable with platinum-catalysed electrodes of the same geometry and found electrodes are not poisoned by carbon monoxide the way platinum is. "The small amounts of carbon monoxide that are always present in exhausts from petrol engines are a real problem for fuel cells because the platinum catalyst is slowly poisoned, eventually destroying the cell," Professor Forsyth said. "The important point to stress is that the team has come up with an alternative fuel cell design that is more economical, more easily sourced, outlasts platinum cells and is just as effective." For more information, an interview or to obtain copies of the research publication, contact Professor Doug MacFarlane on +61 408 361 357 or Dr Bjorn Winther-Jensen on +61 437 765 173. Media and Communications: Samantha Blair +61 3 9903 4841 or +61 439 013 951. |