Carbon
is an important energy carrier. It is abundant in the world,
existing richly in coal and biomass. Its energy is released mainly
through oxidation. A heat energy of ∼393 kJ may be obtained
from the complete oxidation of 1 mol of carbon. The most conventional
method of carbon oxidation is combustion, which has the problems of
pollutant emission and low efficiency. However, through electrochemical
oxidation, the chemical energy of carbon can be converted into electricity
with high efficiency and low pollution. Herein, we give a brief review
of our work on a novel technology of generating electricity and carbon
monoxide from electrochemical oxidation of carbon through a solid
oxide fuel cell (SOFC) at high temperature. This so-called direct
carbon SOFC (DC-SOFC) has an all-solid-state configuration without
any purging gas or liquid medium. Electricity is generated by coupling
of the electrochemical oxidation of CO at the anode and the reverse
Boudouard reaction at the carbon fuel. Meanwhile, gaseous CO and CO2 are produced. We prepared electrolyte-supported and anode-supported
SOFC single cells and stacks and operated them directly with Fe-loaded
activated carbon, biochar derived from orchid leaf and corn cob, respectively,
as the fuel. In particular, we investigated their potential applications
in portable power supplies and electricity-gas cogeneration. Our experimental
results show that the output performance of a DC-SOFC is comparable
to that of a SOFC operated on hydrogen. A 3-cell stack of tubular
anode-supported segmented-in-series DC-SOFC gives a peak areal power
density of 465 mW cm–2 and a volumetric power density
of 710 mW cm–3 at 850 °C. Furthermore, the
composition of the gas emission can be controlled by tuning the operating
electrical current and the catalysts applied for the Boudouard reaction
so that CO gas and electricity cogeneration can be realized.
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