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Department of Energy Science and Engineering
Advanced Energy Materials Laboratory
1. Journal Articles
Selective electrosynthesis of ammonia via nitric oxide electroreduction catalyzed by copper nanowires infused in nitrogen-doped carbon nanorods
Dhanabal, Dinesh
;
Song, Yuyeon
;
Jang, Seoyoung
;
Shanmugam, Sangaraju
Department of Energy Science and Engineering
Advanced Energy Materials Laboratory
1. Journal Articles
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Title
Selective electrosynthesis of ammonia via nitric oxide electroreduction catalyzed by copper nanowires infused in nitrogen-doped carbon nanorods
Issued Date
2025-02
Citation
Dhanabal, Dinesh. (2025-02). Selective electrosynthesis of ammonia via nitric oxide electroreduction catalyzed by copper nanowires infused in nitrogen-doped carbon nanorods. Applied Catalysis B: Environment and Energy, 361. doi: 10.1016/j.apcatb.2024.124577
Type
Article
Author Keywords
Nitrogen fixation
;
Nitrogen-doped carbon nanorods
;
Copper nanowires
;
Ammonia electrosynthesis
;
Nitric oxide electroreduction (NORR)
Keywords
METAL-ORGANIC FRAMEWORK
;
TRANSITION-METALS
;
XPS SPECTRA
;
REDUCTION
;
WATER
;
ELECTROCATALYST
;
CHARS
ISSN
0926-3373
Abstract
The electrochemical nitric oxide reduction reaction (eNORR) is meticulously investigated as an alternative to the energy intensive Haber-Bosch process to produce Ammonia (NH3). However, the eNORR is hindered by NH3 selectivity due to side reactions and mass-transfer limitations. In this work, we rationally designed copper nanowires (Cu NWs) infused in the lotus-root-like multi-nano-channels of the porous N-doped carbon nanorods (Cu-mNCNR) for a high selective eNORR to synthesize NH3 at ambient conditions. The optimized catalyst, Cu-mNCNR2, has achieved the highest NH3 Faradaic efficiency of 79% with NH3 yield rate of 34.5 μmol cm–2 h–1 at −0.4 VRHE. Moreover, the Cu-mNCNR2 has demonstrated a vigorous performance in the 24 h continuous NO electrolysis to produce NH3. Additionally, a prototype device, the Zn-NO battery, was demonstrated. This study shows that the rational design of a catalyst considering mass-transfer limitations is crucial to achieving high selective NH3 electrosynthesis in eNORR. © 2024 Elsevier B.V.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/57437
DOI
10.1016/j.apcatb.2024.124577
Publisher
Elsevier
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