| Realizes
more than two watts of output power in a unit size of a sugar cube (one
cubic centimeter) below 600°C
Points
* Successful development
of a small high power solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) cubic bundle integrated
very fine ceramic tubes in a volume of a sugar cube.
* The SOFC bundle
generates the world’s highest output power density (two watts per cubic
centimeter) at an operating temperature of below 600°C, previously
considered not possible for SOFCs that are normally operated at high temperatures.
* Easy to fabricate
micro fuel cell stacks, which opens the possibility of developing small
SOFC systems with output power ranging from several tens of watts (several
tens of cubic centimeters) to several kilowatts (several thousand cubic
centimeters)
Summary
Toshio
Suzuki (Research Scientist) of the Functional Assembly Technology Group
(Group Leader: Masanobu Awano) of the Advanced Manufacturing Research Institute
(Director: Hideto Mitome) of the National Institute of Advanced Industrial
Science and Technology (President: Hiroyuki Yoshikawa) (hereinafter referred
to as AIST) and Yoshihiro Funabashi of the Fine Ceramics Research Association
(FCRA) and NGK Spark Plug Co., Ltd. (NGK; President: Norio Kato), have
successfully developed a small solid-oxide fuel cell (SOFC) bundle with
the size of a sugar cube.
Toho Gas Co., Ltd. (Toho Gas), which
is examining small SOFC cubes for cogeneration purpose, evaluated the performance
of the newly developed small SOFC bundle and confirmed that it can produce
a high output power, even at operating temperatures of below 600°C.
The applications of SOFCs have previously
been limited by their high operating temperatures, typically 800–1000 °C,
so realization of high output power SOFC modules that operate at lower
temperatures have long been expected. AIST, FCRA, and NGK have developed
a small, highly integrated, cubic micro SOFC bundle about the size of a
sugar cube (Photo 1). Toho Gas examined its electrochemical performance
and found that it has the world’s highest power density per volume, of
more than two watts per cubic centimeter at below 600 °C.
This achievement should open the
way to commercialize practical micro SOFC systems for auxiliary power supplies
for vehicles, small cogeneration systems, and portable power units. These
research results were presented at the International Ceramic Exhibition
on 4th–6th of April 2007 at Tokyo Big Sight.
Social Background of Research
Fuel cells are helpful in reducing
emissions of CO2, one of the causes of global warming. For this reason,
various approaches to the development of fuel cells are being examined.
Of the currently developed fuel cells, SOFCs are the most efficient fuel
cells using ceramic technology which is a specialty of Japanese industry.
Because typical SOFCs are operated at higher temperatures than do other
fuel cells, it can utilize heat exhausts for fuel reformation and hot-water
storage to improve the efficiency as a whole. At the same time, SOFCs are
durable because they can be made entirely of ceramics. To date, however,
because SOFCs have to be operated at high temperatures of between 800 and
1000 °C, they have only been applied in power-generation infrastructure
operations with a low thermal cycle and few load changes. Therefore, there
has long been a desire to develop an SOFC that could be used in distributed
household power systems, to power mobile electronic devices, or as an auxiliary
power source for vehicles: such applications would require rapid operation
and the ability to be operated at below 650°C.
History of Research
On the basis of the above social
background, AIST, FCRA, NGK, and Toho Gas have been trying to develop an
SOFC suitable for practical applications that is capable of rapid operation
at below 650 °C. This research is a part of the “Advanced Ceramic Reactor”
project (2005–2009) of the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development
Organization (NEDO). AIST, so far, has successfully developed high-performance
tubular micro SOFCs with diameters of millimeters to sub-millimeters.
For practical applications, it is
necessary to integrate tubular micro SOFCs to form stacked modules. For
this purpose, a structure that can combine a high porosity (to provide
an adequate air supply) with a low electrical resistance (to permit current
collection) was needed to be developed. It was difficult to build such
structures because the electrical resistance of the materials tends to
increase if they are perforated to increase their porosity.
AIST, FCRA, and NGK examined ceramic
manufacturing technologies such as microstructure controlling technology
and cell assemble technology using commercially available ceramic materials,
and they developed new methods of integration and manufacturing integrated
SOFC bundles.
These efforts were made to develop
such high performance SOFC bundles as a part of NEDO’s “Advanced Ceramic
Reactor” project.
Details of Research
The SOFC bundle uses lanthanum cobalt
as the air electrode material that forms part of the SOFC bundle. This
made it possible to establish the technology for producing a small cubic
SOFC bundle with a power output of two watts or more per cubic centimeter
at below 600 °C. This technology is suitable for mass production, because
it relies on basic ceramics-forming technology.
The actual micro SOFC cube bundle
is an integrated structure that has a volume of one cubic centimeter and
tubular cells with a diameter of 0.8-2.0 mm. Toho Gas examined the performance
of the SOFC bundles by flowing hydrogen into micro tubular SOFCs with 2
mm in diameter, operating at 550 °C. The tests confirmed that the SOFC
cube bundle generated more than two watts of power (Photo 2). As shown
in Figure 2, the test data show that a volume of one cubic centimeter can
generate more than two watts of power for a current of 4.5 amperes at the
operating temperature of 550 °C.
The tests confirmed that the SOFC
bundle produces the highest volumetric power density of any known fuel
cell and does so at a current of 4.5 ampere and an operating temperature
of below 600 °C. At the same time, the bundle is the world’s smallest
fully-fledged micro tube SOFC cube with passages for fuel and air.
The newly-developed micro SOFC opens
the prospect of stacking micro SOFCs to produce stacks and modules ranging
in size from small mobile electric power units of several tens of watts
with volumes of several tens of cubic centimeters to auxiliary power units
for vehicles or household power units with outputs of several kilowatts
and volumes of several thousand cubic centimeters. SOFCs are expected to
be applied as distributed power units for household use, as power units
for mobile electronics devices, and as auxiliary power sources for vehicles.
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