Release Date: July 30, 2012 |
||||||
Seven Projects That Will Advance Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Research Selected by DOE for Further Development Goal is Generation of Efficient, Environmentally Responsible Electricity from Coal
| ||||||
Washington, D.C.— Seven projects that will help develop low-cost solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) technology for environmentally responsible central power generation from the Nation’s abundant fossil energy resources have been selected for further research by the Department of Energy (DOE). The projects, managed by the Office of Fossil Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL), are valued at a total of $4,391,570, with DOE contributing $3,499,250 and the remaining cost provided by the recipients. Four of the selected projects will pursue advances in cathode performance, enabling higher efficiency, lower cost systems. Three projects will study the stability and durability of cathode materials when exposed to varying levels of humidity and contaminants expected in commercial deployment. The projects will develop solutions to current technical challenges consistent with the aggressive cost, reliability and endurance goals of the Solid State Energy Conversion Alliance (SECA). The ultimate goal is the generation of efficient, cost-competitive electricity from domestic coal with near-zero emissions of carbon dioxide and air pollutants. The projects include: Topic Area 1: Electrochemical Performance Enhancement Activity
Topic Area 2: Durability of Cathode Materials
The SOFCs under development within SECA are ideal for use in central generation applications, enabling efficient and economical systems for up to 99 percent carbon capture. They also emit practically no pollutants (nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides) while consuming approximately one-third less water than other advanced power generation technologies. Power plants based on SECA fuel cells and coal gasifiers—units that turn solid coal into gaseous fuel—will generate power with overall efficiencies greater than 50 percent, compared to approximately 25 percent for traditional coal-fired power plants, including CO2 capture processes. Furthermore, SECA fuel cell technology is inherently fuel-flexible and modular, making them suitable to a wide variety of power generation applications. Founded in 1999, SECA is a collaboration among the Federal government, private industry, academic institutions and national laboratories devoted to the development of low-cost SOFC technology. SECA is comprised of three groups: the Industry Teams, the Core Technology Program, and Federal government management. The Core Technology Program utilizes researchers in a wide variety of fields and disciplines to conduct applied research and development into cross-cutting technical issues encountered by the Industry Teams. Specific emphasis in this new work is placed on enhancing the reliability, robustness and endurance of SOFC stacks to commercially viable levels. |
||||||
|