Junction and energy band on novel semiconductor-based fuel cells
Review article, 2021

Fuel cells are highly efficient and green power sources. The typical membrane electrode assembly is necessary for common electrochemical devices. Recent research and development in solid oxide fuel cells have opened up many new opportunities based on the semiconductor or its heterostructure materials. Semiconductor-based fuel cells (SBFCs) realize the fuel cell functionality in a much more straightforward way. This work aims to discuss new strategies and scientific principles of SBFCs by reviewing various novel junction types/interfaces, i.e., bulk and planar p-n junction, Schottky junction, and n-i type interface contact. New designing methodologies of SBFCs from energy band/alignment and built-in electric field (BIEF), which block the internal electronic transport while assisting interfacial superionic transport and subsequently enhance device performance, are comprehensively reviewed. This work highlights the recent advances of SBFCs and provides new methodology and understanding with significant importance for both fundamental and applied R&D on new-generation fuel cell materials and technologies.

Electrochemistry

Energy Engineering

Energy Materials

Materials Science

Author

Enyi Hu

Southeast University

Zheng Jiang

Southeast University

Liangdong Fan

Shenzhen University

Manish Singh

Lund University

Faze Wang

Southeast University

Rizwan Raza

COMSATS University Islamabad

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Muhammad Sajid

COMSATS University Islamabad

Jun Wang

Southeast University

Jung Sik Kim

Loughborough University

B. Zhu

Loughborough University

Southeast University

iScience

25890042 (eISSN)

Vol. 24 3 102191

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Energy Engineering

Textile, Rubber and Polymeric Materials

Other Chemical Engineering

Areas of Advance

Energy

DOI

10.1016/j.isci.2021.102191

PubMed

33681729

More information

Latest update

1/3/2024 9