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SOFCs

AFC = all line fuel ceU MCFC = molten carbonate fuel ceU PAFC = phosphoric acid fuel ceU PEFC = polymer electrolyte fuel ceU and SOFC = solid oxide fuel ceU. [Pg.577]

Fig. 4. Schematic representation of the cross section of tubular configuration for SOFC. Fig. 4. Schematic representation of the cross section of tubular configuration for SOFC.
An electrochemical vapor deposition (EVD) technique has been developed that produces thin layers of refractory oxides that are suitable for the electrolyte and cell interconnection in SOFCs (9). In this technique, the appropriate metal chloride (MeCl ) vapor is introduced on one side of a porous support tube, and H2/H2O gas is introduced on the other side. The gas environments on both sides of the support tube act to form two galvanic couples, ie. [Pg.581]

The tubular design is the most advanced SOFC technology. Tests of a nominal WFC 25-kW SOFC unit were started in 1992 at Rokko Island near Osaka, Japan in a joint program by Kansai Electric Co., Osaka Gas, and Tokyo Gas Co. This unit consists of 1152 cells, 50-cm length, which are contained... [Pg.584]

For high temperature fuel ceUs, there is stiU a strong need to develop lower cost materials for ceU components. In the case of SOFCs, improved fabrication processes and materials that permit acceptable performance in fuel ceUs at lower operating temperatures are also highly desirable. [Pg.586]

FIG. 27-67 Pol arization cuitcs at different teiiiperatnres for 50-cni active length thin-wall SOFCs. [Pg.2413]

FIG. 27-68 Configiir ation of the tiilmlar SOFC. (Covriesij of Weslirij Iiouse Eleclnc Corporn-liori.)... [Pg.2414]

FIG. 27-69 SOFC 25-kW system packige. (Coviiosij of WesliTij Jiouse EJeclnc Corpomlion.)... [Pg.2414]

The measured pressure drops were slightly greater than literature data would indicate for packed carbon beds. However, they are certainly not prohibitive and a successful outcome of the Westinghouse trial of the SOFC guard bed is anticipated. [Pg.200]

Because this design has relatively low power density, recent work has focused on a monolithic SOFC, since this could have faster cell chemistry kinetics. The very high temperatures do, however, present sealing and cracking problems between the electrochemically active area and the gas manifolds. [Pg.528]

Conceptually elegant, the SOFC nonetheless contains inherently expensive materials, such as an electrolyte made from zirconium dioxide stabilized with yttrium oxide, a strontium-doped lanthanum man-gaiiite cathode, and a nickel-doped stabilized zirconia anode. Moreover, no low-cost fabrication methods have yet been devised. [Pg.528]

One leading prototype of a high-temperature fuel cell is the solid oxide fuel cell, or SOFC. The basic principle of the SOFC, like the PEM, is to use an electrolyte layer with high ionic conductivity but very small electronic conductivity. Figure B shows a schematic illustration of a SOFC fuel cell using carbon monoxide as fuel. [Pg.504]

Unlike the PEM, the ionic conduction occurs for the oxygen ion instead of the hydrogen ion. SOFCs are made of ceramic materials like zirconium (Z = 40) stabilized by yttrium (Z = 39). High-temperature oxygen conductivity is achieved by creating oxygen vacancies in the lattice structure of the electrolyte material. The halfcell reactions in this case are... [Pg.504]

Figure C shows an electron photomicrograph of a broken planar SOFC. The thick portion on the left is the porous anode structure. This is an anode-supported cell, meaning that in addition to collecting current and supporting the anode reaction, the anode layer stiffens the whole cell. The layer on the right is the cathode, and the interface between the two is the thin electrolyte. One of the challenges of this design is to ensure that the rates of expansion of the cathode and the anode match. If the anode expands faster than the cathode, the planar cell tends to curl like a potato chip when the temperature changes. Figure C shows an electron photomicrograph of a broken planar SOFC. The thick portion on the left is the porous anode structure. This is an anode-supported cell, meaning that in addition to collecting current and supporting the anode reaction, the anode layer stiffens the whole cell. The layer on the right is the cathode, and the interface between the two is the thin electrolyte. One of the challenges of this design is to ensure that the rates of expansion of the cathode and the anode match. If the anode expands faster than the cathode, the planar cell tends to curl like a potato chip when the temperature changes.
Reactions (3.9) to (3.11) proceed rapidly to equilibrium in most anodic solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) environments and thus H2 (Eq. 3.8) rather than CH4 is oxidized electrochemically resulting in low polarization losses. Upon doubling the stoichiometric coefficients of equation (3.8), summing equations (3.8) to (3.11) and dividing the resulting coefficients by two one obtains ... [Pg.98]

Thus indeed CH4 oxidation in a SOFC with a Ni/YSZ anode results into partial oxidation and the production of synthesis gas, instead of generation of C02 and H20 as originally believed. The latter happens only at near-complete CH4 conversion. However the partial oxidation overall reaction (3.12) is not the result of a partial oxidation electrocatalyst but rather the result of the catalytic reactions (3.9) to (3.11) coupled with the electrocatalytic reaction (3.8). From a thermodynamic viewpoint the partial oxidation reaction (3.12) is at least as attractive as complete oxidation to C02 and H20. [Pg.98]

This reaction is of great technological interest in the area of solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC) since it is catalyzed by the Ni surface of the Ni-stabilized Zr02 cermet used as the anode material in power-producing SOFC units.60,61 The ability of SOFC units to reform methane "internally", i.e. in the anode compartment, permits the direct use of methane or natural gas as the fuel, without a separate external reformer, and thus constitutes a significant advantage of SOFC in relation to low temperature fuel cells. [Pg.410]

Solid oxide fuel cell, SOFC anodes, 97 catalysis in, 98,410 cathodes, 96... [Pg.573]

SOFC Anode, cathode, electrolyte Powder synthesis... [Pg.77]

Sol-gel technique has also been applied to modify the anode/electrolyte interface for SOFC running on hydrocarbon fuel [16]. ANiA SZ cermet anode was modified by coating with SDC sol within the pores of the anode. The surface modification of Ni/YSZ anode resulted in an increase of structural stability and enlargement of the TPB area, which can serve as a catalytic reaction site for oxidation of carbon or carbon monoxide. Consequently, the SDC coating on the pores of anode leads to higher stability of the cell in long-term operation due to the reduction of carbon deposition and nickel sintering. [Pg.79]

This presentation reports some studies on the materials and catalysis for solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) in the author s laboratory and tries to offer some thoughts on related problems. The basic materials of SOFC are cathode, electrolyte, and anode materials, which are composed to form the membrane-electrode assembly, which then forms the unit cell for test. The cathode material is most important in the sense that most polarization is within the cathode layer. The electrolyte membrane should be as thin as possible and also posses as high an oxygen-ion conductivity as possible. The anode material should be able to deal with the carbon deposition problem especially when methane is used as the fuel. [Pg.95]

It was also found [8] that the sintering conditions have significant effects on the resistivity of the Smo.iCeo.gOi.g material. As shown in Fig. 4, the overall resistivity decreases with lower sintering temperature and attains a minimum at the sintering temperature of 1100-1200 °C, which is about 31 ohm-cm at 700 °C measurement. This makes the Smo.2Ceo.801,9 material capable of working as SOFC s electrolyte at temperatures lower than 700 C to avoid possible reduction of cerium (4+) and thus suitable for intermediate-temperature SOFC. [Pg.98]

In the search of high-performance SOFC anode, doped ceria have been evaluated as possible anode materials [9,10]. Comparing Ni-samaria-doped ceria (SDC) with Ni-YSZ, the Ni-SDC anode exhibits higher open-circuit voltages and a lower degree of polarization with either methanol as the fuel, as shown in Fig. 5, or methane as the fuel, as shown in Fig. 6. It was found that the depolarization ability of the anode is associated with the catalytic activity, the electrical conductivity, and the oxygen ionic conductivity of the anode materials [9]. It was also found that the anodic polarization and electro-catalytic activity strongly depend on the Ni content in the anode, and the optimum result for the Ni-SDC anode is achieved with 60... [Pg.98]

Over the anode, the hydrogen and CO produced via reactions (1) and (2) are then oxidized at the anode by reacting with the oxygen species transported from the cathode. The catalysis of the fuel such as methane at the anode and oxygen at the cathode becomes increasingly important with demanding catalytic activity as the SOFC operation temperature decreases, which is the aim under intensive research efforts. [Pg.100]


See other pages where SOFCs is mentioned: [Pg.577]    [Pg.577]    [Pg.580]    [Pg.581]    [Pg.581]    [Pg.584]    [Pg.584]    [Pg.585]    [Pg.2357]    [Pg.2414]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.225]    [Pg.528]    [Pg.1178]    [Pg.527]    [Pg.588]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.181]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.97]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.58 , Pg.59 , Pg.60 , Pg.61 , Pg.70 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.19 ]




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Advances in Testing of SOFCs

Ammonia SOFC

Anode Materials for SOFCs

Anode-Supported SC-SOFCs

Anode-supported SOFC

Anodes microtubular SOFCs

Applications of SC-SOFCs Systems

Auxiliary Power SOFC System

Based Fuel Electrodes for SOFC

Basic Principles of SOFC

Carbon monoxide fuel oxidation within SOFC

Catalysis in SC-SOFCs

Cathodes Materials for SOFC

Cathodes for Intermediate Temperature SOFCs

Coal Fueled SOFC System

Components of SOFC

Control Issues of SOFC-GT Hybrid System

Design Principles of SOFC Hybrid Systems

Design issues tubular SOFCs

Designs of SOFC

Designs of SOFC Stacks

Designs of SOFC System

Development of Intermediate Temperature SOFC Stacks Systems

Developments of Proton-Conducting SOFCs

Different Interconnects for SOFC

Economic Issues of Biofuels as Fuel for SOFC

Example of a Specific SOFC System Application

Factors Influencing the Lifetime of SOFCs

Flat-tube SOFC

Fuel SOFC

Fuel cell high temperature, SOFC

Fuel cells SOFC geometries

Gas-Manifold Design for a Tubular SOFC

Glasses in Contact with Adjacent Components of SOFC

HPD-SOFCs

HT- and IT-SOFC

HT-SOFC

High power density SOFC

High temperature, SOFC

Hydrogen fuel oxidation within SOFC

IT-SOFC

Ideal Reversible SOFC Thermodynamics

Interim-Temperature SOFCs

Interim-Temperature SOFCs (ITSOFCs)

Interim-temperature SOFC

Intermediate Temperature SOFCs

Intermediate-Temperature SOFCs Using Proton-Conducting Perovskite

Intermediate-temperature solid oxide fuel cells IT-SOFCs)

Internal reforming, SOFC

Low temperature SOFCs

Low-Temperature SOFCs (LT-SOFC)

Low-temperature SOFC

MIEC Electrochemical Performances as SOFC or SOEC Electrodes

Medium-Temperature SOFCs

Methane fuel oxidation within SOFC

Microtubular SOFC

Microtubular SOFC Design

Microtubular SOFC Stacks

Microtubular SOFCs

Modeling SOFC Fueled by Bio-Fuels

Monolithic SOFC

Monolithic SOFCs

Nano-structural effect on SOFC durability

Next Generation SOFC Materials

Oxygen reduction, SOFC

Performance of SOFC

Perovskite Oxide Anodes for SOFCs

Perovskite Oxide for Cathode of SOFCs

Perovskite SOFC-related

Perovskite-type materials SOFCs anodes

Perovskite-type materials SOFCs cathodes

Perovskite-type materials SOFCs electrolytes

Perovskites and Related Mixed Oxides for SOFC Applications

Planar SOFC, structure

Planar SOFCs

Polarization Curves of PEMFC and SOFC

Polarization curves, SOFCs

Power generating burner SOFC model

Practical Design and Stacking Arrangements for the SOFC

Reactivity with SOFC Component

Reversible SOFC thermodynamics

SC-SOFC

SC-SOFC Systems

SOFC

SOFC Anode Electrode

SOFC Anode Materials and Performance

SOFC Cathode Electrode

SOFC Cathode Materials

SOFC Cathode Materials and Performance

SOFC Cell Designs

SOFC Combined Cycles, Novel System Designs and Hybrid Systems

SOFC Components

SOFC Electrode

SOFC Electrolyte Membrane

SOFC Fuel Processing

SOFC Interconnect

SOFC Internal Process

SOFC Manoeuvrability

SOFC Modeling

SOFC Performance

SOFC Performance at

SOFC Power Generation Systems

SOFC Specifications

SOFC System Cost Structure

SOFC System Costs

SOFC System Demonstrations

SOFC Technology Its Working and Components

SOFC Testing Procedure

SOFC anode

SOFC applications

SOFC cathodes

SOFC cathodes Solid oxide fuel cells

SOFC cathodes three-phase-boundaries

SOFC cost-effective

SOFC electrolyte

SOFC planar

SOFC stack

SOFC systems

SOFC technology

SOFC tubular

SOFC, anode resistivity

SOFC, design

SOFC, fabrication

SOFC, half-cell reactions

SOFC, thermal wave

SOFC-GT Hybrid System Evaluation

SOFC-Related Publications

SOFCs with an LSC(F) Cathode

SOFCs with an LSM Cathode

Schematic Design of Conventional SOFCs

Schematic Design of a Conventional SOFC

Sealant, SOFC stack

Sealing glass SOFC applications

Siemens - SOFC Integration with Gas Turbines

Siemens Westinghouse Distributed Power Generations SOFC System

Siemens Westinghouse SOFC

Siemens Westinghouse SOFC Field Units

Simulation of Bio-Fuels as Fuel for SOFC

Single-Chamber SOFCs

Single-chamber solid oxide fuel cells SC-SOFCs)

Single-chamber- SOFC

Solid Oxide (SOFC)

Solid electrolytes for SOFCs

Solid oxide fuel cells SOFCs)

Solid oxide fuel cells, SOFC

Solid-state electrochemistry SOFCs

Stack Designs 2 Planar SOFC Design

Steam turbine/SOFC hybrid systems

Temperature SOFC current

The SOFC

The Utilization of Natural Fuels in SOFCs

Thermodynamic Theory of SOFC Hybrid Systems

Thermodynamics, Performance, and Configurations of SOFC

Transportation SOFC-based APUs

Tubular SOFC Design

Tubular SOFC, structure

Tubular SOFCs

Tubular cathode-supported SOFC

Tubular-type SOFCs

Using Renewable Fuels in SOFCs

Utilization of Natural Fuels in SOFCs

Varieties of SOFCs

W Atmospheric SOFC System

W SOFC-System

Westinghouse, SOFC cathode designs

Zirconia-based SOFCs

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