Direct oxidation of hydrocarbons in a solid-oxide fuel cell
Top Cited Papers
- 1 March 2000
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 404 (6775), 265-267
- https://doi.org/10.1038/35005040
Abstract
The direct electrochemical oxidation of dry hydrocarbon fuels to generate electrical power has the potential to accelerate substantially the use of fuel cells in transportation and distributed-power applications1. Most fuel-cell research has involved the use of hydrogen as the fuel, although the practical generation and storage of hydrogen remains an important technological hurdle2. Methane has been successfully oxidized electrochemically3,4,5,6, but the susceptibility to carbon formation from other hydrocarbons that may be present or poor power densities have prevented the application of this simple fuel in practical applications1. Here we report the direct, electrochemical oxidation of various hydrocarbons (methane, ethane, 1-butene, n-butane and toluene) using a solid-oxide fuel cell at 973 and 1,073 K with a composite anode of copper and ceria (or samaria-doped ceria). We demonstrate that the final products of the oxidation are CO2 and water, and that reasonable power densities can be achieved. The observation that a solid-oxide fuel cell can be operated on dry hydrocarbons, including liquid fuels, without reforming, suggests that this type of fuel cell could provide an alternative to hydrogen-based fuel-cell technologies.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- High-temperature conversion of methane on a composite gadolinia-doped ceria–gold electrodeApplied Catalysis A: General, 1999
- A Novel Method for Preparing Anode Cermets for Solid Oxide Fuel CellsJournal of the Electrochemical Society, 1999
- Direct Oxidation of Hydrocarbons in a Solid Oxide Fuel Cell: I. Methane OxidationJournal of the Electrochemical Society, 1999
- A direct-methane fuel cell with a ceria-based anodeNature, 1999
- Bringing Fuel Cells Down to EarthScience, 1999
- The Power Plant in your BasementScientific American, 1999
- Catalytic Properties of Ceria and CeO2-Containing MaterialsCatalysis Reviews, 1996
- Ceria-Based Anodes for the Direct Oxidation of Methane in Solid Oxide Fuel CellsLangmuir, 1995
- Catalysis of Sm3+ for the oxidation of alkanes with O2 in the liquid phaseJournal of Molecular Catalysis A: Chemical, 1995
- Oxidation of methane in solid state electrochemical reactorsSolid State Ionics, 1988