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      A single-site iron catalyst with preoccupied active centers that achieves selective ammonia electrosynthesis from nitrate

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          Abstract

          Isolated Fe sites achieve enhanced intrinsic activity for nitrate electroreduction to ammonia with ∼100% selectivity, which effectively inhibit water dissociation through a nitrate-preoccupation mechanism.

          Abstract

          The necessity to pursue sustainable ammonia (NH 3) production with economic and environment-friendly technologies is growing with the global development aim of future fertilizer and renewable energy industries. Electrosynthesis of ammonia from nitrate reduction is encouraging for both environmental nitrogen pollution management and artificial nutrient recycling. However, it is fundamentally difficult to regulate the reaction pathways for efficient and selective ammonia production over competing reactions, e.g., the hydrogen evolution reaction, particularly under aqueous conditions. Enlightened by the unique and tunable local electronic structures, an iron-based single-atom catalyst is reported in this contribution. We demonstrate a polymer-hydrogel strategy for preparing nitrogen-coordinated Fe sites with uniform atomic dispersion on carbon. The catalyst exhibits a maximum NH 3 yield rate of 2.75 mg NH3 h −1 cm −2 ( ca. 30 mol NH3 h −1 g Fe −1) with nearly 100% faradaic efficiency. Furthermore, the catalytically active individual Fe site in the isolated atom state displays a twelve times higher turnover frequency than that in metallic Fe nanoparticles. Experimental evidence suggests that the single-site iron would experience a nitrate-preoccupied transition center, which prohibits water adsorption as the competitive reaction that generally exists for bulk catalysts. Theoretical insights into the localized structure further assist in better understanding and support of the high selectivity for NH 3 achieved by the Fe single-atom catalyst.

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          Most cited references51

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          High-performance electrocatalysts for oxygen reduction derived from polyaniline, iron, and cobalt.

          The prohibitive cost of platinum for catalyzing the cathodic oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) has hampered the widespread use of polymer electrolyte fuel cells. We describe a family of non-precious metal catalysts that approach the performance of platinum-based systems at a cost sustainable for high-power fuel cell applications, possibly including automotive power. The approach uses polyaniline as a precursor to a carbon-nitrogen template for high-temperature synthesis of catalysts incorporating iron and cobalt. The most active materials in the group catalyze the ORR at potentials within ~60 millivolts of that delivered by state-of-the-art carbon-supported platinum, combining their high activity with remarkable performance stability for non-precious metal catalysts (700 hours at a fuel cell voltage of 0.4 volts) as well as excellent four-electron selectivity (hydrogen peroxide yield <1.0%).
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            How a century of ammonia synthesis changed the world

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              Transformation of the nitrogen cycle: recent trends, questions, and potential solutions.

              Humans continue to transform the global nitrogen cycle at a record pace, reflecting an increased combustion of fossil fuels, growing demand for nitrogen in agriculture and industry, and pervasive inefficiencies in its use. Much anthropogenic nitrogen is lost to air, water, and land to cause a cascade of environmental and human health problems. Simultaneously, food production in some parts of the world is nitrogen-deficient, highlighting inequities in the distribution of nitrogen-containing fertilizers. Optimizing the need for a key human resource while minimizing its negative consequences requires an integrated interdisciplinary approach and the development of strategies to decrease nitrogen-containing waste.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                EESNBY
                Energy & Environmental Science
                Energy Environ. Sci.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                1754-5692
                1754-5706
                June 16 2021
                2021
                : 14
                : 6
                : 3522-3531
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Materials Science and Engineering Program
                [2 ]Texas Materials Institute
                [3 ]The University of Texas at Austin
                [4 ]Austin
                [5 ]USA
                [6 ]Center for Electrochemistry
                [7 ]Department of Chemistry
                Article
                10.1039/D1EE00545F
                fd2f7f7d-8ccd-4659-b8d8-bab8d0217f9e
                © 2021

                Free to read

                http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use#chorus

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