Search Asia Times

Advanced Search

      
 
Korea

Samsung develops hydrogen-powered scooter

SEOUL - Samsung Engineering Co says it has conducted a successful test-ride of a hydrogen-powered motorcycle, with applications for automobiles, laptop computers and mobile phones.

The scooter, the result of a project sponsored by the Ministry of Science and Technology and the Korea Institute of Science and Technology, can run up to 140 kilometers on six liters of hydrogen fuel, it said.

The newly-developed technology uses a water-based solution of sodium borohydride, made from sodium borate, to produce hydrogen gas.

The company explained that on six liters of hydrogen fuel, the vehicle can travel three times farther than a scooter powered by a nickel-cadmium cell, saying that the technology can also be applied in automobiles, laptop computers and mobile phones.

The downside is that there are only about 300 million tons of sodium borate worldwide, located mostly in Tibet, and that annual global production of sodium borohydride stands at 10,000 tons, it added.

"The development and testing of the hydrogen-powered scooter shows that South Korea's technology is on a par with that of the world," said Yu Yong-ho, president of Samsung Engineering's R&D center.

(Asia Pulse/lYonhap)


Nov 19, 2004
Asia Times Online Community



 

 
   
         
No material from Asia Times Online may be republished in any form without written permission.
Copyright 2003, Asia Times Online, 4305 Far East Finance Centre, 16 Harcourt Rd, Central, Hong Kong