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Over 56.55% Faradaic efficiency of ambient ammonia synthesis enabled by positively shifting the reaction potential.


ABSTRACT: Ambient electrochemical N2 reduction is emerging as a highly promising alternative to the Haber-Bosch process but is typically hampered by a high reaction barrier and competing hydrogen evolution, leading to an extremely low Faradaic efficiency. Here, we demonstrate that under ambient conditions, a single-atom catalyst, iron on nitrogen-doped carbon, could positively shift the ammonia synthesis process to an onset potential of 0.193?V, enabling a dramatically enhanced Faradaic efficiency of 56.55%. The only doublet coupling representing 15NH4+ in an isotopic labeling experiment confirms reliable NH3 production data. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest efficient N2 access to the single-atom iron with only a small energy barrier, which benefits preferential N2 adsorption instead of H adsorption via a strong exothermic process, as further confirmed by first-principle calculations. The released energy helps promote the following process and the reaction bottleneck, which is widely considered to be the first hydrogenation step, is successfully overcome.

SUBMITTER: Wang M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6341113 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Over 56.55% Faradaic efficiency of ambient ammonia synthesis enabled by positively shifting the reaction potential.

Wang Mengfan M   Liu Sisi S   Qian Tao T   Liu Jie J   Zhou Jinqiu J   Ji Haoqing H   Xiong Jie J   Zhong Jun J   Yan Chenglin C  

Nature communications 20190121 1


Ambient electrochemical N<sub>2</sub> reduction is emerging as a highly promising alternative to the Haber-Bosch process but is typically hampered by a high reaction barrier and competing hydrogen evolution, leading to an extremely low Faradaic efficiency. Here, we demonstrate that under ambient conditions, a single-atom catalyst, iron on nitrogen-doped carbon, could positively shift the ammonia synthesis process to an onset potential of 0.193 V, enabling a dramatically enhanced Faradaic efficie  ...[more]

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