| Literature DB >> 32223152 |
Jie Li, Guangming Zhan1, Jianhua Yang, Fengjiao Quan1, Chengliang Mao1, Yang Liu, Bo Wang, Fengcai Lei, Lejing Li, Alice W M Chan, Liangpang Xu, Yanbiao Shi1, Yi Du2,3, Weichang Hao3, Po Keung Wong, Jianfang Wang, Shi-Xue Dou2,3, Lizhi Zhang1, Jimmy C Yu.
Abstract
The limitations of the Haber-Bosch reaction, particularly high-temperature operation, have ignited new interests in low-temperature ammonia-synthesis scenarios. Ambient N2 electroreduction is a compelling alternative but is impeded by a low ammonia production rate (mostly <10 mmol gcat-1 h-1), a small partial current density (<1 mA cm-2), and a high-selectivity hydrogen-evolving side reaction. Herein, we report that room-temperature nitrate electroreduction catalyzed by strained ruthenium nanoclusters generates ammonia at a higher rate (5.56 mol gcat-1 h-1) than the Haber-Bosch process. The primary contributor to such performance is hydrogen radicals, which are generated by suppressing hydrogen-hydrogen dimerization during water splitting enabled by the tensile lattice strains. The radicals expedite nitrate-to-ammonia conversion by hydrogenating intermediates of the rate-limiting steps at lower kinetic barriers. The strained nanostructures can maintain nearly 100% ammonia-evolving selectivity at >120 mA cm-2 current densities for 100 h due to the robust subsurface Ru-O coordination. These findings highlight the potential of nitrate electroreduction in real-world, low-temperature ammonia synthesis.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32223152 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c00418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419