Vacancy-enabled N2 activation for ammonia synthesis on an Ni-loaded catalyst.
Tian-Nan YeSang-Won ParkYangfan LuJiang LiMasato SasaseMasaaki KitanoTomofumi TadaHideo HosonoPublished in: Nature (2020)
Ammonia (NH3) is pivotal to the fertilizer industry and one of the most commonly produced chemicals1. The direct use of atmospheric nitrogen (N2) had been challenging, owing to its large bond energy (945 kilojoules per mole)2,3, until the development of the Haber-Bosch process. Subsequently, many strategies have been explored to reduce the activation barrier of the N≡N bond and make the process more efficient. These include using alkali and alkaline earth metal oxides as promoters to boost the performance of traditional iron- and ruthenium-based catalysts4-6 via electron transfer from the promoters to the antibonding bonds of N2 through transition metals7,8. An electride support further lowers the activation barrier because its low work function and high electron density enhance electron transfer to transition metals9,10. This strategy has facilitated ammonia synthesis from N2 dissociation11 and enabled catalytic operation under mild conditions; however, it requires the use of ruthenium, which is expensive. Alternatively, it has been shown that nitrides containing surface nitrogen vacancies can activate N2 (refs. 12-15). Here we report that nickel-loaded lanthanum nitride (LaN) enables stable and highly efficient ammonia synthesis, owing to a dual-site mechanism that avoids commonly encountered scaling relations. Kinetic and isotope-labelling experiments, as well as density functional theory calculations, confirm that nitrogen vacancies are generated on LaN with low formation energy, and efficiently bind and activate N2. In addition, the nickel metal loaded onto the nitride dissociates H2. The use of distinct sites for activating the two reactants, and the synergy between them, results in the nickel-loaded LaN catalyst exhibiting an activity that far exceeds that of more conventional cobalt- and nickel-based catalysts, and that is comparable to that of ruthenium-based catalysts. Our results illustrate the potential of using vacancy sites in reaction cycles, and introduce a design concept for catalysts for ammonia synthesis, using naturally abundant elements.
Keyphrases
- highly efficient
- electron transfer
- metal organic framework
- reduced graphene oxide
- room temperature
- density functional theory
- anaerobic digestion
- drug delivery
- cancer therapy
- transition metal
- carbon nanotubes
- wound healing
- molecular dynamics
- gold nanoparticles
- human health
- quantum dots
- oxide nanoparticles
- ionic liquid
- health risk
- mass spectrometry
- molecular dynamics simulations
- gas chromatography
- heavy metals
- risk assessment
- drinking water
- liquid chromatography