Cella Energy's Synthetic Gasoline Cella's CEO Stephen Voller shows off the goods; hydrogen microbeads go under the microscope.
We’re going to go ahead and write this one because it’s all kinds of  interesting, but know that we are doing so with all kinds of skepticism,  fair readers. Because anytime anyone claims to have created inexpensive  synthetic fuel that will burn in conventional automobile engines with  no carbon emissions, you simply have to be on your guard. Nonetheless,  UK-based Cella Energy claims to have done exactly that by devising a hydrogen-based synthetic fuel that could replace gasoline in cars.
The technology—reportedly incubated at the Rutherford Appleton  Laboratory near Oxford in a top secret four-year program—is based on  complex hydrides that are highly unstable, usually degrading rapidly in  air. Put simply, the company claims it has found a nanotech-driven  method that encapsulates hydrogen at usable concentrations in  micro-capsules, allowing it to be handled and burned in conventional  engines without the need to store it in dangerous high-pressure tanks or  super-cooled environments. From Cella’s website:
Cella Energy have developed a method using a low-cost process called  coaxial electrospinning or electrospraying that can trap a complex  chemical hydride inside a nano-porous polymer that speeds up the  kinetics of hydrogen desorption, reduces the temperature at which the  desorption occurs and filters out many if not all of the damaging  chemicals. It also protects the hydrides from oxygen and water, making  it possible to handle it in air.
This means that basically the micro-capsules are stabilized hydrogen  that moves like a fluid, meaning you could pump it into your automobile  as-is, with no engine or fuel injection conversion—though Cella readily  admits that preliminary deployment of their product would likely be as a  fuel-additive that helps to cut down on carbon emissions.
Moreover, Gizmag writes  that the fuel could be produced at a fixed price of about $1.50 per  gallon, a price that would be stable and immune to the whims of OPEC or  anyone else (except Cella, it seems). We’re not exactly sure where to  attribute that dollar value, though Gizmag did interview the company’s  CEO.
 So: $1.50 per gallon carbon-free nano-liquid hydrogen fuel that burns  in existing engines. Sound too good to be true? In theory the science  makes sense assuming the “electrospinning” process works as well as  Cella claims it does. But until those hydrogen micro-beads are powering  our flying cars, we remain optimistically skeptical.
 by "environment clean generations" 

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