Angling Chromium to Let Oxygen Through

New semiconducting material works at temperatures low enough to improve fuel cell efficiency.

Written byPacific Northwest National Laboratory
| 3 min read
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RICHLAND, Wash. – Researchers have been trying to increase the efficiency of solid oxide fuel cells by lowering the temperatures at which they run. More efficient fuel cells might gain wider use in vehicles or as quiet, pollution-free, neighborhood electricity generating stations. A serendipitous finding has resulted in a semiconducting material that could enable fuel cells to operate at temperatures two-thirds lower than current technology, scientists reported August 18 in Nature Communications.

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