Toshio Suzuki (Research Scientist) of the Functional Assembly Technology Group (Group Leader: Masanobu Awano) of the Advanced Manufacturing Research Institute (Director: Hideto Mitome) of the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (President: Hiroyuki Yoshikawa) (hereinafter referred to as AIST) and Yoshihiro Funabashi of the Fine Ceramics Research Association (FCRA) and NGK Spark Plug Co., Ltd. (NGK; President: Norio Kato), have successfully developed a small solid-oxide fuel cell (SOFC) bundle with the size of a sugar cube.
Toho Gas Co., Ltd. (Toho Gas), which is examining small SOFC cubes for cogeneration purpose, evaluated the performance of the newly developed small SOFC bundle and confirmed that it can produce a high output power, even at operating temperatures of below 600°C.
The applications of SOFCs have previously been limited by their high operating temperatures, typically 8001000 °C, so realization of high output power SOFC modules that operate at lower temperatures have long been expected. AIST, FCRA, and NGK have developed a small, highly integrated, cubic micro SOFC bundle about the size of a sugar cube (Photo 1). Toho Gas examined its electrochemical performance and found that it has the world’s highest power density per volume, of more than two watts per cubic centimeter at below 600 °C.
This achievement should open the way to commercialize practical micro SOFC systems for auxiliary power supplies for vehicles, small cogeneration systems, and portable power units. These research results were presented at the International Ceramic Exhibition on 4th6th of April 2007 at Tokyo Big Sight.




