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By LARRY RINGLER Tribune Chronicle
GARRETTSVILLE - The myth of the American inventor goes
something like this: The guy next door gets a flash of
insight, then spends months, even years, in a dingy garage
trying to perfect it. Neighbors see him bringing boxes in
and out of the garage at all hours. Lights flash in the
window, weird noises can be heard.
The next thing they know, newspapers are hailing the guy as
the Wizard of Whatnot, and he's driving a Porsche to the bank.
Of course, no one remembers him if he, like the vast
majority of Thomas Edison hopefuls, spends his life tilting at
creaky windmills that will never make him rich or society
better.
Exactly where Leavittsburg resident William Whittenberger
and his company, Catacel Corp., will fit into the myth remains
unknown. He, however, is hard at work in a large garage-type
building outside Garrettsville on technology he believes will
play a role in the future hydrogen economy.
The company's Spiral Stackable Reactor made of corrugated
stainless steel coated with ceramic impressed the Edison
Materials Technology Center in Dayton enough that the group in
late January awarded it a $234,352 contract.
Whittenberger's task is to show if the creation can replace
less durable ceramic material now used in commercial reformers
- large furnaces used by oil refiners, cooking oil makers,
fertilizer companies and others to produce the hydrogen they
need to make their products.
Oil refiners, for instance, use hydrogen to eliminate
sulfur from crude oil, Whittenberger said. Plants that make
Wesson and other cooking oil, as well as General Electric in
producing tungsten for light bulbs, also need hydrogen.
"If we get this to work and find a niche market, we'll be
fat, dumb and happy,'' he said.
If it lives up to expectations, the device could save those
companies huge amounts of money by slashing their cost to
maintain the reformers, and especially lost production during
the maintenance, Whittenberger said.
Commercial reformers can be large-room size structures that
sit next to an oil refiner or other plant. Inside the reformer
are series of tubes, some 40-feet tall and five or six inches
in diameter.
Currently, large quantities of small, loose ceramic
material are dumped into each tube. Fired with natural gas,
the furnaces then burn at 1,600 to 1,700 degrees Fahrenheit to
produce hydrogen.
The problem is that over repeated heating and cooling
cycles, the ceramic material breaks down, turns to powder and
plugs up the tubes, Whittenberger said.
Once that happens, the company has to suck out the ceramic
powder and replace it with new material. That process can take
three or four days, which cuts the amount of hydrogen the
plant can produce, he said.
"It's a tremendous maintenance headache,'' one that can
cost millions of dollars a day in lost production,
Whittenberger said.
Catacel's solution is to take stainless steel foil,
corrugate it, apply a liquid ceramic catalyst to it and
package it. The process of making the ceramic "slurry'' is a
closely guarded trade secret, said Whittenberger, who said he
holds a MBA degree from Pepperdine University and has worked
in the field for about 20 years.
The final products, which are about six feet long, are then
dropped into each 40-foot tube of the reformer. The new
catalyst probably will last two to three times as long as
ceramic parts used now, and it may even last the life of the
plant, he said.
Besides cutting maintenance, Catacel's product allows the
reformer to become a closed system, which increases safety
because it doesn't have to be opened to be cleaned like
existing systems, he added.
Whittenberger, a native of East Palestine, said he worked
seven years in California before returning to the area. He
said Ohio has the right business environment for his company.
"There's a very talented work force here. The state is very
interested in fuel cells in general,'' he said.
In fact, Catacel's product could be a part of a new energy
source for factories to vehicles to houses.
"Homeowners could use this to replace their furnace and hot
water tank. They'd have some kind of combined heat device to
make heat, hot water and electricity all in one box,'' he
said.
In that case, you might just see Whittenberger and
coworkers at Catacel driving to the bank in Porsches.
lringler@tribune-chronicle.com |