Bioinspired Fe3C@C as Highly Efficient Electrocatalyst for Nitrogen Reduction Reaction under Ambient Conditions.
Ming PengYijin QiaoMin LuoMengjia WangShufen ChuYang ZhaoMingwei ChenJi LiuYongwen TanPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019)
Developing highly efficient non-precious-metal catalysts for electrochemical reduction reaction is vital for artificial nitrogen fixation under ambient conditions. Herein, we report a bioinspired Fe3C@C composite as an efficient electrocatalyst for nitrogen reduction. The composite based on a leaf skeleton successfully replicates the natural vein structure with multichannels. The Fe3C@C core-shell structure as the real active center contributes to selective electrocatalytic synthesis of ammonia from nitrogen with Faraday efficiency of 9.15% and production rate of 8.53 μg/(h mgcat) or 12.80 μg/(h cm2) at a low potential of -0.2 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode (vs RHE), which is better than that of recently reported carbon- and iron-based materials, even comparable with that of noble-metal-based catalyst. Experiments with density functional theory calculations reveal that graphene-encapsulated Fe3C nanoparticles can improve charge transfer due to core-shell interaction, beneficial for inducing active sites for N2 adsorption and activation and thereby facilitate ammonia synthesis.
Keyphrases
- highly efficient
- metal organic framework
- density functional theory
- aqueous solution
- air pollution
- molecular dynamics
- particulate matter
- room temperature
- visible light
- gold nanoparticles
- ionic liquid
- genome wide
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- mass spectrometry
- electron transfer
- reduced graphene oxide
- simultaneous determination