4.8 Article

Unsaturated p-Metal-Based Metal-Organic Frameworks for Selective Nitrogen Reduction under Ambient Conditions

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 40, Pages 44830-44839

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c13902

Keywords

nitrogen reduction reaction; ammonia synthesis; metal-organic frameworks; electrocatalytic activity

Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council [201804910553]
  2. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DE150101306, LP160100927]
  3. Faculty of Science Strategic Investment Funding of University of Newcastle
  4. CSIRO Energy Top-up Scholarship
  5. Australian Research Council [DE150101306] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Electrochemical ammonia synthesis that utilizes renewable electricity in the nitrogen reduction reaction (NRR) has recently been remarkably considered. Of particular importance is to develop efficient electrocatalysts at low costs. Herein, highly selective nitrogen capture using porous aluminum-based metalorganic frameworks (MOFs) materials, MIL-100 (Al), is first designed for the electrochemical nitrogen fixation in alkaline media under ambient conditions. Owing to the unique structure, MIL-100 (Al) exhibits remarkable NRR properties (NH3 yield: 10.6 mu g h(1) cm(2) mgcat.1 and Faradaic efficiency: 22.6%) at a low overpotential (177 mV). Investigation indicates that the catalyst shows excellent N2-selective captures due to the unsaturated metal sites binding with N-2. More specifically, as the Al 3p band can strongly interact with N 2p orbitals, Al as a main group metal presents a high and selective affinity to N-2. The utilization of multifunctional MOF catalysts delivers both high N-2 selectivity and abundant catalytic sites, resulting in remarkable efficiency for NH3 production.

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