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Solid-State Electrochemistry and Solid Oxide Fuel Cells: Status and Future Prospects

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ELECTROCHEMICAL ENERGY REVIEWS
卷 5, 期 SUPPL 1, 页码 -

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1007/s41918-022-00160-8

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Solid-state electrochemistry; Solid oxide fuel cells and solid oxide cells; Solid-to-solid contact; Equipotential line; Polarization-induced segregation and interface; Review

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  1. CAUL

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Solid-state electrochemistry is an interdisciplinary field that studies the conductive properties of solids in ionic conducting solid electrolytes and mixed ionic and electronic conducting materials. Solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs) are an important application in solid-state electrochemistry, with unique electrochemical features. The solid-to-solid contact at the electrode/electrolyte interface is one of the most important features in SOFCs and plays a crucial role in phenomena such as equipotential line shift, constriction effect, and polarization-induced interface formation.
Solid-state electrochemistry (SSE) is an interdisciplinary field bridging electrochemistry and solid-state ionics and deals primarily with the properties of solids that conduct ions in the case of ionic conducting solid electrolytes and electrons and/or electron holes in the case of mixed ionic and electronic conducting materials. However, in solid-state devices such as solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs), there are unique electrochemical features due to the high operating temperature (600-1 000 degrees C) and solid electrolytes and electrodes. The solid-to-solid contact at the electrode/electrolyte interface is one of the most distinguished features of SOFCs and is one of the fundamental reasons for the occurance of most importance phenomena such as shift of the equipotential lines, the constriction effect, polarization-induced interface formation, etc. in SOFCs. The restriction in placing the reference electrode in solid electrolyte cells further complicates the SSE in SOFCs. In addition, the migration species at the solid electrode/electrolyte interface is oxygen ions, while in the case of the liquid electrolyte system, the migration species is electrons. The increased knowledge and understanding of SSE phenomena have guided the development of SOFC technologies in the last 30-40 years, but thus far, no up-to-date reviews on this important topic have appeared. The purpose of the current article is to review and update the progress and achievements in the SSE in SOFCs, largely based on the author's past few decades of research and understanding in the field, and to serve as an introduction to the basics of the SSE in solid electrolyte devices such as SOFCs.

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