“…The early stage of solid oxide development is closely associated with particular activities of prominent scientists such as H. Davy (1802), who probably was the first who formulated the very idea of fuel cell, Michael Faraday (1833) with his well-known research on electrolytes, and Jean-Mathee Gaugain (1853), who discovered galvanic solid electrolyte gas cells. The need in solid electrolytes has grown in the late 19 th century when Pavlo Jablochkoff (1877), Wilhelm Ostwald (1894) and others have been developing fuel cell electrodes that could withstand aggressive liquid electrolytes such as molten alkali carbonates in order to realize the idea "Electricity Directly from Coal" that was then popular, and that, by the way, begun to be interesting now again [5].…”