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Vacancy‐Mediated Control of Local Electronic Structure for High‐Efficiency Electrocatalytic Conversion of N<sub>2</sub> to NH<sub>3</sub>

Heng Guo, Peng Yang, Yuantao Yang, Haoran Wu, Fengying Zhang, Zhen‐Feng Huang, Guidong Yang, Ying Zhou

2023Small24 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Ambient electrocatalytic nitrogen (N 2 ) reduction has gained significant recognition as a potential substitute for producing ammonia (NH 3 ). However, N 2 adsorption and *NN protonation for N 2 activation reaction with the competing hydrogen evolution reaction remain a daunting challenge. Herein, a defect‐rich TiO 2 nanosheet electrocatalyst with PdCu alloy nanoparticles (PdCu/TiO 2−x ) is designed to elucidate the reactivity and selectivity trends of N 2 cleavage path for N 2 ‐to‐NH 3 catalytic conversion. The introduction of oxygen vacancy (OV) not only acts as active sites but also effectively promotes the electron transfer from Pd‐Cu sites to high‐concentration Ti 3+ sites, and thus lends to the N 2 activation via electron donation of PdCu. OVs‐mediated control effectively lowers the reaction barrier of *N 2 H and *H adsorption and facilitates the first hydrogenation process of N 2 activation. Consequently, PdCu/TiO 2−x catalyst attains a high rate of NH 3 evolution, reaching 5.0 mmol g cat. −1 h −1 . This work paves a pathway of defect‐engineering metal‐supported electrocatalysts for high‐efficient ammonia electrosynthesis.

Topics & Concepts

ElectrocatalystCatalysisNanosheetElectron transferProtonationAdsorptionElectrochemistryAmmoniaAmmonia productionVacancy defectChemistryInorganic chemistryReactivity (psychology)Materials scienceReaction intermediatePhotochemistryNanotechnologyPhysical chemistryCrystallographyElectrodeOrganic chemistryAlternative medicineIonPathologyMedicineAmmonia Synthesis and Nitrogen ReductionAdvanced Photocatalysis TechniquesCaching and Content Delivery