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Electrocatalytic Reduction of Nitrogen to Ammonia: the Roles of Lattice O and N in Reduction at Vanadium Oxynitride Surfaces.

Adaeze OsonkieAshwin GanesanPrecious ChukwunenyeFatima AnwarKabirat BalogunMojgan GharaeeIshika RashedThomas R CundariFrancis D'SouzaJeffry A Kelber
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
Vanadium oxynitride and other earth-abundant oxynitrides are of growing interest for the electrocatalytic reduction of nitrogen to NH 3 . A major unresolved issue, however, concerns the roles of lattice N and lattice O in this process. Electrochemistry and photoemission data reported here demonstrate that both lattice N and dissolved N 2 are reduced to NH 3 by cathodic polarization of vanadium oxynitride films at pH 7. These data also show that ammonia production from lattice N occurs in the presence or absence of N 2 and involves the formation of V≡N: intermediates or similar unsaturated VN surface states on a thin vanadium oxide overlayer. In contrast, N 2 reduction proceeds in the presence or absence of lattice N and without N incorporation into a vanadium oxide lattice. Thus, both lattice N and N 2 reduction mechanisms involve oxide-supported V surface sites ([V] O ) in preference to N-supported sites ([V] N ). This result is supported by density functional theory-based calculations showing that the formation of V≡N:, V-N═N-H, and a few other plausible reaction intermediates is consistently energetically favored at [V] O rather than at [V] N surface sites. Similar effects are predicted for the oxynitrides of other oxophilic metals, such as Ti.
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