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January 11, 2012 02:08 am EDT

SiGNa Chemistry sodium silicide might power your next fuel cell

We've been promised portable fuel cells for years, but tech from SiGNa Chemistry might have a real shot at taking the concept mainstream. Instead of the more commonly used methanol, the outfit serves up a sodium silicide mix which it's begun licensing to companies bearing the "SiGNa fueled" logo. One example is PowerTrekk that first went on sale in Europe last December and is now making its way to the US this spring. The special salt concoction comes packaged into 5W hockey puck cartridges -- appropriately called Pukks -- to generate power and subsequently juice whatever device you plug into it over USB. It'll ship stateside in May for $299, replete with an onboard 5W lithium-ion battery which acts as a rechargeable buffer, ensuring you'll still have some juice even after you run out of cartridges. Catch the power generating tech in a video after the break.

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SiGNa Chemistry sodium silicide might power your next fuel cell originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Jan 2012 21:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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