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Journal ArticleDOI

Theoretical Exploration of Electrochemical Nitrate Reduction Reaction Activities on Transition-Metal-Doped h-BP.

19 Apr 2021-Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters (American Chemical Society)-Vol. 12, Iss: 16, pp 3968-3975
TL;DR: In this paper, a series of transition-metal-doped hexagonal boron phosphide (h-BP) monolayers were comprehensively evaluated using density functional theory, and it was shown that the Vdoped h-BP monolayer stands near the top of the volcano plot with the limiting potential of -0.22 V versus a reversible hydrogen electrode, exhibiting the lowest overpotential among the investigated systems.
Abstract: Electrocatalytic conversion of nitrate (NO3-) into ammonia can not only eliminate harmful pollutant but also provide a green method for a low-temperature ammonia synthesis. The electrochemical NO3- reduction reactions (NO3RRs) of a series of transition-metal-doped hexagonal boron phosphide (h-BP) monolayers were comprehensively evaluated using density functional theory. The V-doped h-BP monolayer was found to stand near the top of the volcano plot with the limiting potential of -0.22 V versus a reversible hydrogen electrode, exhibiting the lowest overpotential among the investigated systems in this work. Besides, the competing hydrogen evolution reaction is significantly suppressed due to the weak adsorption of the H atom. Importantly, the structure of the V-doped h-BP monolayer can be retained very well until 900 K, illustrating the initial indication of high thermal stability and great promise for synthesis. This study not only offers an eligible NO3RR electrocatalyst but also provides an atomic understanding of the behind mechanisms of the NO3RR process.
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrated the in situ electroreduction of pre-synthesized CuO nanoplates into defect-rich metallic CuNoplates and evaluated their electrocatalytic nitrate-to-ammonia activity.
Abstract: The development of efficient catalysts for electrocatalytic selective conversion of nitrate pollutants into valuable ammonia is a project of far-reaching importance. This work demonstrated the in situ electroreduction of pre-synthesized CuO nanoplates into defect-rich metallic Cu nanoplates and evaluated their electrocatalytic nitrate-to-ammonia activity. Concentrated atomic defects in the as-converted Cu nanoplates could favor the adsorption, enrichment and confinement of nitrate ions and pivotal reaction intermediates, selectively promoting eight-electron reduction (NH3 formation). Consequently, the resultant defect-rich Cu nanoplates exhibit a significant ammonia production rate of 781.25 μg h−1 mg−1, together with excellent nitrate conversion (93.26%), high ammonia selectivity (81.99%) and good electrocatalytic stability, superior to the defect-free Cu nanoplate counterpart. Isotope labelling experiments demonstrated that the source of ammonia was from nitrate. Both 1H NMR and colorimetric methods were used to quantify the ammonia yield.

55 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , a single atom catalyst (SAC) based on graphene represents one of the most promising eNO3RR catalysts, and the underlying catalytic mechanism and the intrinsic factors dictating the catalytic activity trend remain unclear.
Abstract: Electrocatalytic reduction of harmful nitrate (NO3-) to valuable ammonia (eNO3RR) is critical and attractive for both environmental remediation and energy transformation. A single atom catalyst (SAC) based on graphene represents one of the most promising eNO3RR catalysts. However, the underlying catalytic mechanism and the intrinsic factors dictating the catalytic activity trend remain unclear. Herein, using first-principles calculations, eNO3RR on TMN3 and TMN4 (TM = Ti-Ni) doped graphene was thoroughly investigated. Our results reveal that FeN4 doped graphene exhibits excellent eNO3RR performance with a low limiting potential of -0.38 V, agreeing with the experimental finding, which can be ascribed to the effective adsorption and activation of NO3-via the charge "acceptance-donation" mechanism and its moderate binding due to the occupation of the d-p antibonding orbital. In particular, we found that eNO3RR activities are well correlated with the intrinsic properties of TM centers and their local environments. With the established activity descriptor, several other graphene-based SACs were efficiently screened out with excellent eNO3RR performance. Our studies could not only provide an atomic insight into the catalytic mechanism and activity origin of eNO3RR on graphene-based SACs, but also open an avenue for the rational design of SACs for eNO3RR towards ammonia by regulating the metal center and its local coordination environment.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Jie Wu1, Yang-Xin Yu1
TL;DR: In this article, the application potentials of the tetragonal transition-metal phosphide monolayers (M2P, M = Co, Ni, Ru and Pd) as NO3RR electrocatalysts for NH3 synthesis have been comprehensively and originally studied using density functional theory.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the copper nanodendrites (Cu NDs) grown along with the {200} facet as an efficient NtRR catalyst have been successfully fabricated and investigated.
Abstract: Nitrate (NO3-) reduction reaction (NtRR) is considered as a green alternative method for the conventional method of NH3 synthesis (Haber-Bosch process), which is known as a high energy consuming and large CO2 emitting process. Herein, the copper nanodendrites (Cu NDs) grown along with the {200} facet as an efficient NtRR catalyst have been successfully fabricated and investigated. It exhibited high Faradaic efficiency of 97% at low potential (-0.3 V vs RHE). Furthermore, the 15NO3- isotope labeling method was utilized to confirm the formation of NH3. Both experimental and theoretical studies showed that NtRR on the Cu metal nanostructure is a facet dependent process. Dissociation of NO bonding is supposed to be the rate-determining step as NtRR is a spontaneously reductive and protonation process for all the different facets of Cu. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations revealed that Cu{200} and Cu{220} offer lower activation energy for dissociation of NO compared to that of Cu{111}.

25 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
13 Jan 2017-Science
TL;DR: A unified theoretical framework highlights the need for catalyst design strategies that selectively stabilize distinct reaction intermediates relative to each other, and opens up opportunities and approaches to develop higher-performance electrocatalysts for a wide range of reactions.
Abstract: BACKGROUND With a rising global population, increasing energy demands, and impending climate change, major concerns have been raised over the security of our energy future. Developing sustainable, fossil-free pathways to produce fuels and chemicals of global importance could play a major role in reducing carbon dioxide emissions while providing the feedstocks needed to make the products we use on a daily basis. One prospective goal is to develop electrochemical conversion processes that can convert molecules in the atmosphere (e.g., water, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen) into higher-value products (e.g., hydrogen, hydrocarbons, oxygenates, and ammonia) by coupling to renewable energy. Electrocatalysts play a key role in these energy conversion technologies because they increase the rate, efficiency, and selectivity of the chemical transformations involved. Today’s electrocatalysts, however, are inadequate. The grand challenge is to develop advanced electrocatalysts with the enhanced performance needed to enable widespread penetration of clean energy technologies. ADVANCES Over the past decade, substantial progress has been made in understanding several key electrochemical transformations, particularly those that involve water, hydrogen, and oxygen. The combination of theoretical and experimental studies working in concert has proven to be a successful strategy in this respect, yielding a framework to understand catalytic trends that can ultimately provide rational guidance toward the development of improved catalysts. Catalyst design strategies that aim to increase the number of active sites and/or increase the intrinsic activity of each active site have been successfully developed. The field of hydrogen evolution, for example, has seen important breakthroughs over the years in the development of highly active non–precious metal catalysts in acid. Notable advancements have also been made in the design of oxygen reduction and evolution catalysts, although there remains substantial room for improvement. The combination of theory and experiment elucidates the remaining challenges in developing further improved catalysts, often involving scaling relations among reactive intermediates. This understanding serves as an initial platform to design strategies to circumvent technical obstacles, opening up opportunities and approaches to develop higher-performance electrocatalysts for a wide range of reactions. OUTLOOK A systematic framework of combining theory and experiment in electrocatalysis helps to uncover broader governing principles that can be used to understand a wide variety of electrochemical transformations. These principles can be applied to other emerging and promising clean energy reactions, including hydrogen peroxide production, carbon dioxide reduction, and nitrogen reduction, among others. Although current paradigms for catalyst development have been helpful to date, a number of challenges need to be successfully addressed in order to achieve major breakthroughs. One important frontier, for example, is the development of both experimental and computational methods that can rapidly elucidate reaction mechanisms on broad classes of materials and in a wide range of operating conditions (e.g., pH, solvent, electrolyte). Such efforts would build on current frameworks for understanding catalysis to provide the deeper insights needed to fine-tune catalyst properties in an optimal manner. The long-term goal is to continue improving the activity and selectivity of these catalysts in order to realize the prospects of using renewable energy to provide the fuels and chemicals that we need for a sustainable energy future.

7,062 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
16 May 2008-Science
TL;DR: 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.
Abstract: 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.

5,249 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2018
TL;DR: A review of single-atom catalysts can be found in this paper, where the authors discuss the utility of SACs in a broad scope of industrially important reactions and highlight the advantages these catalysts have over those presently used.
Abstract: Single-atom catalysis has arguably become the most active new frontier in heterogeneous catalysis. Aided by recent advances in practical synthetic methodologies, characterization techniques and computational modelling, we now have a large number of single-atom catalysts (SACs) that exhibit distinctive performances for a wide variety of chemical reactions. This Perspective summarizes recent experimental and computational efforts aimed at understanding the bonding in SACs and how this relates to catalytic performance. The examples described here illustrate the utility of SACs in a broad scope of industrially important reactions and highlight the advantages these catalysts have over those presently used. SACs have well-defined active centres, such that unique opportunities exist for the rational design of new catalysts with high activities, selectivities and stabilities. Indeed, given a certain practical application, we can often design a suitable SAC; thus, the field has developed very rapidly and afforded promising catalyst leads. Moreover, the control we have over certain SAC structures paves the way for designing base metal catalysts with the activities of noble metal catalysts. It appears that we are entering a new era of heterogeneous catalysis in which we have control over well-dispersed single-atom active sites whose properties we can readily tune. Single-atom catalysts are heterogeneous materials featuring active metals sites atomically dispersed on a surface. This Review describes methods by which we prepare and characterize these materials, as well as how we can tune their catalytic performance in a variety of important reactions.

2,306 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
25 May 2018-Science
TL;DR: Research prospects for more sustainable routes to nitrogen commodity chemicals are reviewed, considering developments in enzymatic, homogeneous, and heterogeneous catalysis, as well as electrochemical, photochemical, and plasma-based approaches.
Abstract: BACKGROUND The invention of the Haber-Bosch (H-B) process in the early 1900s to produce ammonia industrially from nitrogen and hydrogen revolutionized the manufacture of fertilizer and led to fundamental changes in the way food is produced. Its impact is underscored by the fact that about 50% of the nitrogen atoms in humans today originate from this single industrial process. In the century after the H-B process was invented, the chemistry of carbon moved to center stage, resulting in remarkable discoveries and a vast array of products including plastics and pharmaceuticals. In contrast, little has changed in industrial nitrogen chemistry. This scenario reflects both the inherent efficiency of the H-B process and the particular challenge of breaking the strong dinitrogen bond. Nonetheless, the reliance of the H-B process on fossil fuels and its associated high CO 2 emissions have spurred recent interest in finding more sustainable and environmentally benign alternatives. Nitrogen in its more oxidized forms is also industrially, biologically, and environmentally important, and synergies in new combinations of oxidative and reductive transformations across the nitrogen cycle could lead to improved efficiencies. ADVANCES Major effort has been devoted to developing alternative and environmentally friendly processes that would allow NH 3 production at distributed sources under more benign conditions, rather than through the large-scale centralized H-B process. Hydrocarbons (particularly methane) and water are the only two sources of hydrogen atoms that can sustain long-term, large-scale NH 3 production. The use of water as the hydrogen source for NH 3 production requires substantially more energy than using methane, but it is also more environmentally benign, does not contribute to the accumulation of greenhouse gases, and does not compete for valuable and limited hydrocarbon resources. Microbes living in all major ecosystems are able to reduce N 2 to NH 3 by using the enzyme nitrogenase. A deeper understanding of this enzyme could lead to more efficient catalysts for nitrogen reduction under ambient conditions. Model molecular catalysts have been designed that mimic some of the functions of the active site of nitrogenase. Some modest success has also been achieved in designing electrocatalysts for dinitrogen reduction. Electrochemistry avoids the expense and environmental damage of steam reforming of methane (which accounts for most of the cost of the H-B process), and it may provide a means for distributed production of ammonia. On the oxidative side, nitric acid is the principal commodity chemical containing oxidized nitrogen. Nearly all nitric acid is manufactured by oxidation of NH 3 through the Ostwald process, but a more direct reaction of N 2 with O 2 might be practically feasible through further development of nonthermal plasma technology. Heterogeneous NH 3 oxidation with O 2 is at the heart of the Ostwald process and is practiced in a variety of environmental protection applications as well. Precious metals remain the workhorse catalysts, and opportunities therefore exist to develop lower-cost materials with equivalent or better activity and selectivity. Nitrogen oxides are also environmentally hazardous pollutants generated by industrial and transportation activities, and extensive research has gone into developing and applying reduction catalysts. Three-way catalytic converters are operating on hundreds of millions of vehicles worldwide. However, increasingly stringent emissions regulations, coupled with the low exhaust temperatures of high-efficiency engines, present challenges for future combustion emissions control. Bacterial denitrification is the natural analog of this chemistry and another source of study and inspiration for catalyst design. OUTLOOK Demands for greater energy efficiency, smaller-scale and more flexible processes, and environmental protection provide growing impetus for expanding the scope of nitrogen chemistry. Nitrogenase, as well as nitrifying and denitrifying enzymes, will eventually be understood in sufficient detail that robust molecular catalytic mimics will emerge. Electrochemical and photochemical methods also demand more study. Other intriguing areas of research that have provided tantalizing results include chemical looping and plasma-driven processes. The grand challenge in the field of nitrogen chemistry is the development of catalysts and processes that provide simple, low-energy routes to the manipulation of the redox states of nitrogen.

1,153 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The computations revealed that the single Mo atom supported by a defective BN nanosheet exhibits the highest catalytic activity for N2 fixation at room temperature through an enzymatic mechanism with a quite low overpotential of 0.19 V.
Abstract: The production of ammonia (NH3) from molecular dinitrogen (N2) under mild conditions is one of the most attractive and challenging processes in chemistry. Here by means of density functional theory (DFT) computations, we systematically investigated the potential of single transition metal atoms (Sc to Zn, Mo, Ru, Rh, Pd, and Ag) supported on the experimentally available defective boron nitride (TM–BN) monolayer with a boron monovacancy as a N2 fixation electrocatalyst. Our computations revealed that the single Mo atom supported by a defective BN nanosheet exhibits the highest catalytic activity for N2 fixation at room temperature through an enzymatic mechanism with a quite low overpotential of 0.19 V. The high spin-polarization, selective stabilization of N2H* species, or destabilizing NH2* species are responsible for the high activity of the Mo-embedded BN nanosheet for N2 fixation. This finding opens a new avenue of NH3 production by single-atom electrocatalysts under ambient conditions.

920 citations

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Trending Questions (1)
Can the excess of H compete with the electrochemical nitrate reduction?

The paper mentions that the competing hydrogen evolution reaction is significantly suppressed due to the weak adsorption of the H atom, indicating that the excess of H may not compete with the electrochemical nitrate reduction.