Litcius/Paper detail

Mxene-Cu Electrified Membranes with Confined Lamellar Channels for the Flow-through Electrochemical Reduction of Nitrate to Ammonia

Xin Yang, Guanbao Wei, Jihui Cao, Zhengxin Ding, Rusheng Yuan, Jinlin Long, Chao Xu

2024ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Electrochemical conversion of nitrate to valuable ammonia is a promising but challenging study of wastewater treatment and resource recovery. Herein, we reported an MXene-Cu lamellar electrified membrane with confined channels as a flow-through electrode for ammonia (NH 3 ) synthesis by nitrate (NO 3 – ) reduction. The introduction of Cu nanoparticles into Ti 3 C 2 T x -stacked membranes could broaden their plane channels to improve the mass transfer while confining their permeability to achieve modulation of the water flux. By coordination of the catalytic capacity of Cu nanoparticles as well as the tunable water flux, the Ti 3 C 2 T x -Cu flow-through membrane electrodes exhibited excellent electrocatalytic performance. Particularly, in a closed-cycle flow-through mode, the optimized Ti 3 C 2 T x -Cu membranes were able to convert NO 3 – to NH 3 efficiently, even at high feed concentrations. In addition, these membrane electrodes possessed not only excellent long-term durability but also resistance to organic dye contaminations due to their inherent rejection capability, which allowed them to maintain stable electrocatalytic properties in complex solutions. This work demonstrates that the use of MXene-based electrified membranes with confined channels as flow-through electrodes may be an alternative strategy to achieve sustainable NO 3 – decontamination and NH 3 synthesis, which will conduce to the practical application of specific electrified membranes in the electrochemistry field.

Topics & Concepts

MembraneElectrochemistryChemical engineeringAmmoniaElectrodeElectrodialysisMaterials scienceNitrateChemistryInorganic chemistryNanotechnologyOrganic chemistryPhysical chemistryBiochemistryEngineeringAmmonia Synthesis and Nitrogen ReductionMXene and MAX Phase MaterialsAdvanced Photocatalysis Techniques