Nature Communications (Apr 2024)

Efficient ammonia synthesis from the air using tandem non-thermal plasma and electrocatalysis at ambient conditions

  • Wei Liu,
  • Mengyang Xia,
  • Chao Zhao,
  • Ben Chong,
  • Jiahe Chen,
  • He Li,
  • Honghui Ou,
  • Guidong Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47765-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract While electrochemical N2 reduction presents a sustainable approach to NH3 synthesis, addressing the emission- and energy-intensive limitations of the Haber-Bosch process, it grapples with challenges in N2 activation and competing with pronounced hydrogen evolution reaction. Here we present a tandem air-NOx-NOx −-NH3 system that combines non-thermal plasma-enabled N2 oxidation with Ni(OH)x/Cu-catalyzed electrochemical NOx − reduction. It delivers a high NH3 yield rate of 3 mmol h−1 cm−2 and a corresponding Faradaic efficiency of 92% at −0.25 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode in batch experiments, outperforming previously reported ones. Furthermore, in a flow mode concurrently operating the non-thermal plasma and the NOx − electrolyzer, a stable NH3 yield rate of approximately 1.25 mmol h−1 cm−2 is sustained over 100 h using pure air as the intake. Mechanistic studies indicate that amorphous Ni(OH)x on Cu interacts with hydrated K+ in the double layer through noncovalent interactions and accelerates the activation of water, enriching adsorbed hydrogen species that can readily react with N-containing intermediates. In situ spectroscopies and density functional theory (DFT) results reveal that NOx − adsorption and their hydrogenation process are optimized over the Ni(OH)x/Cu surface. This work provides new insights into electricity-driven distributed NH3 production using natural air at ambient conditions.