Abstract

Increasing environment awareness and energy demands are the reasons for emerging energy technologies with ecofriendliness and high efficiency. Of the various candidates, the solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) is very appealing because of its high efficiency and fuel flexibility. Traditionally, SOFCs directly convert the chemical energies of the readily available fuels into electricity with H2O and CO2 as the products, which is very promising in terms of the energy efficiency yet leads to CO2 emission in practice. In fact, SOFCs are able to allow in situ CO2–CH4 reforming and H2 selective electro-oxidation in their anodes. Such a process enables a sustainable path to produce electrical power and syngas from CO2 but is hindered by several issues. This Perspective discusses the main technical challenges of this process and available approaches achieved so far. The potential future directions for advancing this technology are also pointed out.

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