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Temporally Decoupled Ammonia Splitting by a Zn-NH 3 Battery with an Ammonia Oxidation/Hydrogen Evolution Bifunctional Electrocatalyst as a Cathode.

Yangyang FengLanting HuangZhiwei XiaoXu ZhuangTayyab Sohail AslamXiang ZhangYan-Xi TanYaobing Wang
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Ammonia splitting to hydrogen is a decisive route for hydrogen economy but is seriously limited by the complex device and low efficiency. Here, we design and propose a new rechargeable Zn-NH 3 battery based on temporally decoupled ammonia splitting to achieve efficient NH 3 -to-H 2 conversion. In this system, ammonia is oxidized into nitrogen during cathodic charging (2NH 3 + 6OH - → N 2 + 6H 2 O + 6e - ) with external electrical energy conversion and storage, while during cathodic discharging, water is reduced to hydrogen (2H 2 O + 2e - → H 2 + 2OH - ) with electrical energy generation. In this loop, continuous and efficient H 2 production without separation and purification is achieved. With the help of the ammonia oxidation reaction (AOR) and hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) bifunctional catalyst of Mo 2 C/NiCu@C, a rechargeable Zn-NH 3 battery is realized that exhibits a high NH 3 -to-H 2 FE of 91.6% with outstanding durability for 900 cycles (300 h) at 20 mA/cm 2 , enabling efficient and continuous NH 3 -to-H 2 conversion.
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