- ZC-DCFC converts coal into electricity without combustion or turbine
- Xie Heping’s system circumvents Carnot limits through direct electrochemical conversion
- Coal powder reacts inside fuel cells to instantly generate electricity
For more than a century, coal has carried an environmental stigma that few other energy sources share.
The familiar image of chimneys spewing gray smoke has become shorthand for industrial pollution and climate damage.
Yet a research team led by Xie Heping of Shenzhen University now claims to have completely rewritten this narrative.
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How a no-combustion system actually works
The team says its technology doesn’t burn coal at all and produces electricity without releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
The system, described as a zero-carbon direct carbon fuel cell, or ZC-DCFC, replaces thermal processes with direct conversion of the chemical to electricity in a controlled cellular environment.
Instead of igniting the coal, the system pulverizes the fuel into a fine powder, then dries and purifies it.
The treated material then undergoes a surface treatment to optimize its reactivity to an electrochemical environment.
Oxygen enters the cathode side of the fuel cell, while the prepared carbon feeds the anode chamber.
Inside the cell, an oxide membrane facilitates the direct oxidation of carbon particles, generating electricity on site.
This approach eliminates conventional steps such as steam generation and mechanical turbines.
Traditional coal-fired power plants operate via an indirect route that burns fuel to generate heat, then steam, and finally mechanical rotation.
This multi-stage chain reaches a hard ceiling known as the Carnot limit, which typically limits thermal efficiency to around 40%.
The zero-carbon direct coal fuel cell loses no energy because it is not associated with combustion.
The new method converts chemical energy directly into electricity, with a potential efficiency of up to 90%.
Managing carbon without releasing it
When the carbon enters the anode chamber, the reaction produces carbon dioxide, which is immediately captured on site.
Rather than venting the gas into the atmosphere, the system catalytically transforms it into useful chemical feedstocks such as syngas.
It can also stabilize it in compounds such as sodium bicarbonate, used for industrial applications, chemical raw materials or fume treatment.
This closed-loop manipulation makes the operation both quiet and clean, an approach that contrasts with conventional coal combustion.
The approach could prove key to cleaning up China’s booming data center industry, which demands enormous core power while facing growing pressure to reduce emissions.
Since 2018, Xie’s research group has gradually advanced the technology through successive iterations, addressing persistent issues in materials science and cell sustainability.
Earlier versions of direct carbon fuel cells struggled with low power density and short operational lifetimes.
The latest design improves stack scalability, long-term stability and carbon conversion efficiency.
Xie says the concept could be applied to deep coal deposits about 2 km underground, converting coal into electricity on-site without costly mining and transportation operations.
If these claims are true, this technology could mark a turning point not only for China but also for many countries that have since “abandoned” their coal mines due to the proliferation of crude oil.
Via SCMP
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