Splicing the active phases of copper/cobalt-based catalysts achieves high-rate tandem electroreduction of nitrate to ammonia.
Wenhui HeJian ZhangStefan DieckhöferSwapnil VarhadeAnn Cathrin BrixAnna LielpetereSabine SeiselJoão R C JunqueiraWolfgang SchuhmannPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
Electrocatalytic recycling of waste nitrate (NO 3 - ) to valuable ammonia (NH 3 ) at ambient conditions is a green and appealing alternative to the Haber-Bosch process. However, the reaction requires multi-step electron and proton transfer, making it a grand challenge to drive high-rate NH 3 synthesis in an energy-efficient way. Herein, we present a design concept of tandem catalysts, which involves coupling intermediate phases of different transition metals, existing at low applied overpotentials, as cooperative active sites that enable cascade NO 3 - -to-NH 3 conversion, in turn avoiding the generally encountered scaling relations. We implement the concept by electrochemical transformation of Cu-Co binary sulfides into potential-dependent core-shell Cu/CuO x and Co/CoO phases. Electrochemical evaluation, kinetic studies, and in-situ Raman spectra reveal that the inner Cu/CuO x phases preferentially catalyze NO 3 - reduction to NO 2 - , which is rapidly reduced to NH 3 at the nearby Co/CoO shell. This unique tandem catalyst system leads to a NO 3 - -to-NH 3 Faradaic efficiency of 93.3 ± 2.1% in a wide range of NO 3 - concentrations at pH 13, a high NH 3 yield rate of 1.17 mmol cm -2 h -1 in 0.1 M NO 3 - at -0.175 V vs. RHE, and a half-cell energy efficiency of ~36%, surpassing most previous reports.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- metal organic framework
- gold nanoparticles
- electron transfer
- single cell
- nitric oxide
- perovskite solar cells
- highly efficient
- reduced graphene oxide
- air pollution
- drinking water
- label free
- molecular dynamics
- human health
- mass spectrometry
- aqueous solution
- particulate matter
- genome wide
- mesenchymal stem cells
- risk assessment
- fluorescent probe
- molecularly imprinted
- single molecule
- health risk
- drug induced