Phase Engineering of High-Entropy Alloy for Enhanced Electrocatalytic Nitrate Reduction to Ammonia.
Rong ZhangYaqin ZhangBo XiaoShaoce ZhangYanbo WangHuilin CuiChuan LiYue HouYing GuoTao YangJun FanChunyi ZhiPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
Directly electrochemical conversion of nitrate (NO 3 - ) is an efficient and environmentally friendly technology for ammonia (NH 3 ) production but is challenged by highly selective electrocatalysts. High-entropy alloys (HEAs) with unique properties are attractive materials in catalysis, particularly for multi-step reactions. Herein, we first reported the application of HEA (FeCoNiAlTi) for electrocatalytic NO 3 - reduction to NH 3 (NRA). The bulk HEA is active for NRA but limited by the unsatisfied NH 3 yield of 0.36 mg h -1 cm -2 and Faradaic efficiency (FE) of 82.66 %. Through an effective phase engineering strategy, uniform intermetallic nanoparticles are introduced on the bulk HEA to increase electrochemical active surface area and charge transfer efficiency. The resulting nanostructured HEA (n-HEA) delivers enhanced electrochemical NRA performance in terms of NH 3 yield (0.52 mg h -1 cm -2 ) and FE (95.23 %). Further experimental and theoretical investigations reveal that the multi-active sites (Fe, Co, and Ni) dominated electrocatalysis for NRA over the n-HEA. Notably, the typical Co sites exhibit the lowest energy barrier for NRA with *NH 2 to *NH 3 as the rate-determining step.