Nature Communications (Oct 2024)

Upgrading of nitrate to hydrazine through cascading electrocatalytic ammonia production with controllable N-N coupling

  • Shunhan Jia,
  • Libing Zhang,
  • Hanle Liu,
  • Ruhan Wang,
  • Xiangyuan Jin,
  • Limin Wu,
  • Xinning Song,
  • Xingxing Tan,
  • Xiaodong Ma,
  • Jiaqi Feng,
  • Qinggong Zhu,
  • Xinchen Kang,
  • Qingli Qian,
  • Xiaofu Sun,
  • Buxing Han

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52825-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Nitrogen oxides (NOx) play important roles in the nitrogen cycle system and serve as renewable nitrogen sources for the synthesis of value-added chemicals driven by clean electricity. However, it is challenging to achieve selective conversion of NOx to multi-nitrogen products (e.g., N2H4) via precise construction of a single N-N bond. Herein, we propose a strategy for NOx-to-N2H4 under ambient conditions, involving electrochemical NOx upgrading to NH3, followed by ketone-mediated NH3 to N2H4. It can achieve an impressive overall NOx-to-N2H4 selectivity of 88.7%. We elucidate mechanistic insights into the ketone-mediated N-N coupling process. Diphenyl ketone (DPK) emerges as an optimal mediator, facilitating controlled N-N coupling, owing to its steric and conjugation effects. The acetonitrile solvent stabilizes and activates key imine intermediates through hydrogen bonding. Experimental results reveal that Ph2CN* intermediates formed on WO3 catalysts acted as pivotal monomers to drive controlled N-N coupling with high selectivity, facilitated by lattice-oxygen-mediated dehydrogenation. Additionally, both WO3 catalysts and DPK mediators exhibit favorable reusability, offering promise for green N2H4 synthesis.