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Piezo-enhanced activation of dinitrogen for room temperature production of ammonia.

Michael FrankYusuf BulutLisa CzympielRene WeißingVanessa NahrstedtMichael WilhelmMatthias GroschAida RaaufAnjneya VermaThomas FischerSanjay Mathur
Published in: Nanotechnology (2021)
The catalytic conversion of nitrogen to ammonia remains an energy-intensive process, demanding advanced concepts for nitrogen fixation. The major obstacle of nitrogen fixation lies in the intrinsically high bond energy (941 kJ mol-1) of the N≡N molecule and the absence of a permanent dipole in N2. This kinetic barrier is addressed in this study by an efficient piezo-enhanced gold catalysis as demonstrated by the room temperature reduction of dinitrogen into ammonia. Au nanostructures were immobilized on thin film piezoelectric support of potassium sodium niobate (K0.5Na0.5NbO3, KNN) by chemical vapor deposition of a new Au(III) precursor [Me2Au(PyTFP)(H2O)]1(PyTFP = (Z)-3,3,3-trifluoro-1-(pyridin-2-yl)-prop-1-en-2-olate) that exhibited high volatility (60 °C, 10-3mbar) and clean decomposition mechanism to produce well adherent elemental gold films on KNN and Ti substrates. The gold-functionalized KNN films served as an efficient catalytic system for ammonia production with a Faradaic efficiency of 18.9% achieved upon ultrasonic actuation. Our results show that the spontaneous polarization of piezoelectric materials under external electrical fields augments the sluggish electron transfer kinetics by creating instant dipoles in adsorbed N2molecules to deliver a piezo-enhanced catalytic system promising for sustained activation of dinitrogen molecules.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • ionic liquid
  • electron transfer
  • sensitive detection
  • minimally invasive
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • silver nanoparticles
  • visible light
  • crystal structure
  • high resolution
  • mass spectrometry