4.7 Article

Synergistic effect of diatomic Mo-B site confined in graphene-like C2N enables electrocatalytic nitrogen reduction via novel mechanism

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 157, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0112520

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21673137]
  2. Program for Top Talents in the Songjiang District of Shanghai
  3. U.S. DOE Office of Science Facility
  4. Scientific Data and Computing Center, a component of the Computational Science Initiative, at Brookhaven National Laboratory [DE-SC0012704]

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Structural modulation of the active site with atomic-level precision is crucial for electrocatalysts to overcome activity and selectivity challenges. This study explores the electrocatalytic N-2 reduction reaction using a metal-nonmetal diatomic site embedded in graphene-like C2N. The Mo-B site exhibits a pronounced synergistic effect and a novel quasi-dissociative reaction mechanism, demonstrating superior performance over conventional mechanisms.
Structural modulation of the active site with atomic-level precision is of great importance to meet the activity and selectivity challenges that electrocatalysts are commonly facing. In this work, we have designed a metal (M)-nonmetal diatomic site embedded in graphene-like C2N (denoted as Mo-B@C2N), where the electrocatalytic N-2 reduction reaction (eNRR) was thoroughly explored using density functional theory combined with the computational hydrogen electrode method. Compared to M-M diatomic sites, the Mo-B site can generate a pronounced synergistic effect that led to eNRR proceeding via a novel quasi-dissociative reaction mechanism that has not been reported relative to the conventional enzymatic, consecutive, distal, and alternating associative mechanism. This newly uncovered mechanism in which N-N bond scission takes place immediately after the first proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) step (i.e., *NH-*N + H+ + e(-) -> *NH2*N) has demonstrated much advantage in the PCET process over the four conventional mechanism in terms of thermodynamic barrier, except that the adsorption of side-on *N-2 seemed thermodynamically unfavorable (& UDelta;G(ads) = 0.61 eV). Our results have revealed that the activation of the inert N & EQUIV;N triple bond is dominated by the pi*-backdonation mechanism as a consequence of charge transfers from both the B and Mo sites and, unexpectedly, from the substrate C2N itself as well. Moreover, the hybrid Mo-B diatomic site demonstrated superior performance over either the Mo-Mo or B-B site for driving eNRR. Our study could provide insight into the delicate relationships among atomic site, substrate, and electrocatalytic performance. Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing.

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