Technology Review
April 20, 2011
Startup company SiEnergy Systems has overcome a major barrier to  commercializing solid-oxide fuel cells with a prototype that operates at  temperatures hundreds of degrees lower than those on the market today.  Working with Harvard materials science professor Shriram  Ramanathan, SiEnergy Systems, based in Boston, has demonstrated a  solid-oxide fuel cell that can operate at 500 degrees Celsius, as  opposed to the 800 to 1,000 degrees required by existing devices. This  allows the cell, which uses a thin-film electrolyte mechanically  supported by a metal grid, to be much larger than similar devices  fabricated before—on the order of centimeters in area, the size needed  for practical applications, rather than micrometers.
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