Thursday, October 7, 2010

Magic powder can make electric bikes run on urine :)

Published: Thursday, Oct 7, 2010, 19:42 IST
Place: Washington, DC | Agency: ANI


Pedago offers several models of electric bicycles.


Electric bikes may soon be able to go up to 60 miles without any pedalling, thanks to a new fuel cell system by the company SiGNa Chemistry, which uses a magic powder that nullifies the danger of having hydrogen stored next to your nether regions and can work even by urine. For a long time, that was one of the main reasons why electric bikes didn't all have fuel cells. But, the range extending system that SiGNa developed uses a sandy metal powder called sodium silicide, which creates hydrogen gas as soon as water hits it, reports Discovery News. According to the company, sodium silicide is "a safe, air-stable reactive metal powder" that produces hydrogen at about half the pressure of a soda can. While it’s not clear on precisely how it's made, but it looks like the powder can be formed by absorbing sodium in porous silicon dioxide, or reacting sodium directly with elemental silicon. After the powder in the cartridge creates hydrogen gas, the byproducts are sodium silicate, which is actually pretty useful stuff, and water vapour. Once all the powder is spent, the cartridge containing it can be reused. With SiGNa's fuel cell system, electric bikes should be able to go up to 60 miles without any pedalling, as opposed to the 20-mile limit for most existing e-bikes. A spent cartridge can be swapped out for a new one with no need for recharging. Unlike lithium-ion battery energy density, which is around 65 Watt-hours per kilogram, the cartridge has an energy density of more than 1,000 Watt-hours per kilogram, according to a press release published by Wired's Gadget Lab. The cartridge doesn't need special water, either -- even urine will be enough to make it work. You know, in case something goes horribly wrong on that ride. Recently the company worked with the electric bike manufacturer Pedego to demonstrate the range extender at the Interbike International Trade Expo in Las Vegas. SiGNa describes the £1.5 cartridges as "inexpensive," but didn't give a price. Currently the company is taking pre-orders for the fuel cells, so it will likely be a while yet before they make their way into any vehicle.