Ni- and Cu-co-Intercalated Layered Manganese Oxide for Highly Efficient Electro-Oxidation of Ammonia Selective to Nitrogen.
Kenji NagitaYoshiki YuharaKenta FujiiYu KatayamaMasaharu NakayamaPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
We fabricated a thin film of layered MnO2 whose interlayer space was occupied by hydrated Ni2+ and Cu2+ ions. The process consisted of electrodeposition of layered MnO2 intercalated with tetrabutylammonium cations (TBA+) by anodic oxidation of aqueous Mn2+ ions in the presence of TBA+, followed by ion exchange of the initially incorporated bulkier TBA+ with the denser transition metals in solution. The resulting layered MnO2 co-intercalated with Ni2+ and Cu2+ ions (NiCu/MnO2) catalyzed the ammonia oxidation reaction (AOR) in an alkaline electrolyte with a much lower overpotential than its Ni2+- and Cu2+-intercalated single-cation counterparts. Surprisingly, the NiCu/MnO2 electrode achieved a faradic efficiency as high as nearly 100% (97.4%) for nitrogen evolution at a constant potential of +0.6 V vs Hg/HgO. This can be ascribed to the occurrence of the AOR in the potential region where water is stable and dimerization of the partially dehydrogenated ammonia species is preferred, thereby forming an N-N bond, rather than to be further oxidized into NOx species.
Keyphrases
- highly efficient
- aqueous solution
- transition metal
- metal organic framework
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- anaerobic digestion
- quantum dots
- human health
- preterm infants
- hydrogen peroxide
- ion batteries
- risk assessment
- electron transfer
- reduced graphene oxide
- solid state
- climate change
- water soluble
- reactive oxygen species
- heavy metals
- carbon nanotubes
- solar cells
- single molecule