4.8 Article

Demonstrating the Direct Relationship between Hydrogen Evolution Reaction and Catalyst Deactivation in Synthetic Fe Nitrogenases

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 10, Issue 21, Pages 12555-12568

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.0c02315

Keywords

nitrogen fixation; hydrogen evolution reaction; catalyst deactivation; transition metal hydrides; microkinetic modeling; density functional theory

Funding

  1. New National Excellence Programme of Ministry for Innovation and Technology of Hungary
  2. NKFIH [115503]
  3. KGYNK Fellowship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  4. University of Alabama
  5. Office of Information Technology
  6. NIIF

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Synthetic Fe nitrogenases are promising catalysts for atmospheric pressure ammonia synthesis. However, their catalytic efficiency is severely limited by the accompanying hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and fast catalyst deactivation. In order to reveal the origin of these undesired transformations, we study potential reaction routes of HER, catalyst deactivation, and nitrogen reduction reaction (N2RR) by density functional theory in combination with microkinetic modeling, using a triphosphino-silyl ligated iron complex as model system. Our results show that the most favorable HER cycle is initiated by H-2 molecules originated from the noncatalytic reaction of acid and reductant reagents, which can coordinate to a vacant binding site of an Fe complex. Thus, H-2 coordination competes with the N-2 coordination step of the desired N2RR catalytic cycle, and the resulting Fe-H-2 complex can be protonated at both hydrogen atoms to release two H-2 molecules. The proposed mechanism, called autocatalytic hydrogen evolution reaction (aHER), explains all experimentally observed results including catalyst deactivation, as aHER intermediates can be easily converted into thermodynamically stable, catalytically inactive monohydrides. Our results suggest that improved efficacy of synthetic Fe nitrogenases can be achieved by several ways: (i) proper ligand modifications hindering the formation of Fe-H-2 complexes, (ii) suppressing the noncatalytic H-2 formation in the catalytic mixture by different reagent choice, and (iii) using flow or semiflow reactor setup instead of batch reactors and keep the proton and electron reagent excess low.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available