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Synergy of Substrate Chemical Environments and Single-Atom Catalysts Promotes Catalytic Performance: Nitrogen Reduction on Chiral and Defected Carbon Nanotubes.

Saifei YuanGuodong MengDongyuan LiuWen ZhaoHouyu ZhuYuhua ChiHao RenWenyue Guo
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
The catalytic activities of single-atom catalysts (SACs) are strongly influenced by the local chemical environments of their substrates, by which the electronic structures of the SACs can be effectively tuned. Together with the freedom of available reactive metallic centers, it would be feasible to maximize the catalytic performance by means of a synergetic optimization in the chemical space spanned by the features of both the substrate and the catalytic center. In this work, using first-principles calculations, we systematically assessed the synergetic effect between the substrate geometric/electronic structures and the catalytic centers on the electrocatalytic nitrogen reduction reaction (NRR). Carbon nanotubes with different chirality, defects, and chemical functionalization were used to support 15 transition metal atoms. Three SACs, TiN 4 CNT(3,3), TiN 4 CNT(5,5), and VN 4 CNT(3,3), simultaneously possess high NRR selectivities (w.r.t hydrogen evolution) and low overpotentials of 0.35, 0.35, and 0.37 V, respectively. Electronic structure analysis elucidated that larger metal atoms anchored on CNTs with higher curvature and doped by N atoms facilitate the rupture of the N-N bond in *NH 2 NH 2 to lower the overpotentials. The synergy of substrate chemical environments and single atomic catalysis is a promising strategy to optimize the catalytic performance.
Keyphrases
  • carbon nanotubes
  • transition metal
  • crystal structure
  • molecular dynamics
  • highly efficient
  • metal organic framework
  • amino acid
  • density functional theory
  • structural basis