Lowering the Temperature of Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
University of Maryland, College Park
Abstract
Fuel cells are uniquely capable of overcoming combustion efficiency limitations (e.g., the Carnot cycle). However, the linking of fuel cells (an energy conversion device) and hydrogen (an energy carrier) has emphasized investment in proton-exchange membrane fuel cells as part of a larger hydrogen economy and thus relegated fuel cells to a future technology. In contrast, solid oxide fuel cells are capable of operating on conventional fuels (as well as hydrogen) today. The main issue for solid oxide fuel cells is high operating temperature (about 800°C) and the resulting materials and cost limitations and operating complexities (e.g., thermal cycling). Recent solid oxide fuel cells results have demonstrated…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 50.68
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 40
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Hydrogen fuel
- Proton exchange membrane fuel cell
- Oxide
- Chemical energy
- Hydrogen fuel enhancement
- Materials science
- Energy transformation
- Hydrogen