By
Michael Kanellos
Friday, December 08 2006 10:55 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,61973290,00.htm
A battery technology that was touted nine years ago for notebooks may finally get its day in the sun.

Stan Glasgow, president
Sony Electronics
Notebook makers will "likely" soon choose to incorporate lithium polymer
batteries over the current commonly used type, lithium ion batteries, Sony Electronics President Stan Glasgow said during a
meeting with reporters Thursday.
Lithium polymer batteries use lithium as an active ingredient. Lithium is a
volatile material, but the lithium in these batteries isn't packed into cells as
it is in lithium ion batteries. Instead, it is contained in a polymer gel. These
gel batteries can't provide the same sort of energy density as lithium ion batteries, but that's now a plus.
Manufacturers, and in particular Sony, have pushed the energy density (or
capacity) of lithium ion batteries. When an internal short occurs, it can set
off a chain reaction and start a fire.
Dell, Lenovo, Toshiba, Apple Computer and others, in conjunction with Sony, have
offered to take back millions of lithium ion batteries shipped with particular
notebooks in the past two years.
"There is not too much more power we want to cram into lithium ion," Glasgow
said.
Historically, polymer batteries have not
been able to provide the long battery life manufacturers and consumers
demand. Mitsubishi put lithium polymer batteries in its ill-fated Pedion notebook
in 1997. The notebook sported several design novelties--it was far thinner than
contemporary designs and was the first notebook with a shiny metallic
chassis--but it cost nearly US$6,000 and had some mechanical problems.
Despite their struggles, industrial designers have always liked lithium
polymer because gel packs can be squeezed into devices' empty spaces. Lithium
polymer has also improved over time. Some manufacturers are using
it in phones.
Several companies are responding to the hazards of lithium ion by coming out
with nonlithium batteries. Zinc Matrix Power
and PowerGenix, for example, are
promoting zinc-based batteries for notebooks and other devices. Zinc Matrix says
it will start shipping batteries in 2007. Glasgow asserted that that these
battery technologies could take a little while to get to market.
"I don't think anything new is going to be available in the next 12 to 18
months," he said.
MTI Micro Fuel Cells
and others will also try to popularize fuel cells, which harvest electricity for notebooks by passing methanol through a membrane.