TY - JOUR
T1 - Atomic hydrogen provision by cobalt sites in a bimetallic Ni/Co(OH)x and trimetallic Ni/Cu2O/Co(OH)x configurations for superior ammonia production
AU - Cerrón-Calle, Gabriel Antonio
AU - Wines, Annika
AU - Garcia-Segura, Sergi
N1 - Funding Information:
This project has received funding from the ACS Herman Frasch Fund for Chemical Research, Bank of America, N.A., Trustee . The undergraduate support of the Fulton Undergraduate Research Initiative (FURI) is acknowledged. The authors thank the partial financial support by the National Science Foundation (NSF) through the Nanosystems Research Center for Nanotechnology-Enabled Water Treatment (NEWT) under the project EEC-1449500 . We acknowledge the use of facilities within the Eyring Materials Center at Arizona State University supported partially by NNCI-ECCS-1542160 . We thank the support provided by Manuel Roldan-Gutierrez at the Eyring Materials Center for the STEM characterizations conducted in this study.
Funding Information:
This project has received funding from the ACS Herman Frasch Fund for Chemical Research, Bank of America, N.A. Trustee. The undergraduate support of the Fulton Undergraduate Research Initiative (FURI) is acknowledged. The authors thank the partial financial support by the National Science Foundation (NSF) through the Nanosystems Research Center for Nanotechnology-Enabled Water Treatment (NEWT) under the project EEC-1449500. We acknowledge the use of facilities within the Eyring Materials Center at Arizona State University supported partially by NNCI-ECCS-1542160. We thank the support provided by Manuel Roldan-Gutierrez at the Eyring Materials Center for the STEM characterizations conducted in this study.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2023/7/5
Y1 - 2023/7/5
N2 - Electrochemical reduction of nitrate provides a green alternative for decentralized ammonia production by selectively transforming a pollutant in an added-value product. Electrocatalysts containing platinum group metals (PGM) present a high selectivity and stability for ammonia production. However, these cost-prohibitive elements motivate the design of catalysts based on earth-abundant elements with comparable performance. Herein, Ni/Co(OH)x and Ni/Cu2O/Co(OH)x interfaces illustrate high competitiveness as PGM-free substitutive electrocatalyst. Evaluation of synergistic effects and mechanisms suggest co-existing direct charge transfer reduction and catalytic hydrogenation by atomic hydrogen provision over Co(OH)x sites. Trimetallic configuration reached high nitrate conversion (90.3 %) in less than 120 min when treating solutions at environmental-relevant concentration of 30 mg L−1 NO3--N. Meanwhile, electrode stability evaluation demonstrated high activity retention (>90 %) and negligible metal leaching after 12 h of sustained use. These results motivate the exploration of electrocatalyst based on earth-abundant materials for electrochemically driven N-resource recovery.
AB - Electrochemical reduction of nitrate provides a green alternative for decentralized ammonia production by selectively transforming a pollutant in an added-value product. Electrocatalysts containing platinum group metals (PGM) present a high selectivity and stability for ammonia production. However, these cost-prohibitive elements motivate the design of catalysts based on earth-abundant elements with comparable performance. Herein, Ni/Co(OH)x and Ni/Cu2O/Co(OH)x interfaces illustrate high competitiveness as PGM-free substitutive electrocatalyst. Evaluation of synergistic effects and mechanisms suggest co-existing direct charge transfer reduction and catalytic hydrogenation by atomic hydrogen provision over Co(OH)x sites. Trimetallic configuration reached high nitrate conversion (90.3 %) in less than 120 min when treating solutions at environmental-relevant concentration of 30 mg L−1 NO3--N. Meanwhile, electrode stability evaluation demonstrated high activity retention (>90 %) and negligible metal leaching after 12 h of sustained use. These results motivate the exploration of electrocatalyst based on earth-abundant materials for electrochemically driven N-resource recovery.
KW - Electrochemical water treatment
KW - Multi-metallic electrocatalysts
KW - Resource recovery
KW - Three-dimensional electrode
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U2 - 10.1016/j.apcatb.2023.122540
DO - 10.1016/j.apcatb.2023.122540
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85149416173
SN - 0926-3373
VL - 328
JO - Applied Catalysis B: Environmental
JF - Applied Catalysis B: Environmental
M1 - 122540
ER -