Hydrogen permeable electrodes can be utilized for electrolytic
ammonia synthesis from dinitrogen, water, and renewable electricity
under ambient conditions, providing a promising route toward sustainable
ammonia. The understanding of the interactions of adsorbing N and
permeating H at the catalytic interface is a critical step toward
the optimization of this NH3 synthesis process. In this
study, we conducted a unique in situ near ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy experiment to investigate the solid–gas interface
of a Ni hydrogen permeable electrode under conditions relevant for
ammonia synthesis. Here, we show that the formation of a Ni oxide
surface layer blocks the chemisorption of gaseous dinitrogen. However,
the Ni 2p and O 1s XPS spectra reveal that electrochemically driven
permeating atomic hydrogen effectively reduces the Ni surface at ambient
temperature, while H2 does not. Nitrogen gas chemisorbs
on the generated metallic sites, followed by hydrogenation via permeating
H, as adsorbed N and NH3 are found on the Ni surface. Our
findings suggest that the first hydrogenation step to NH and the NH3 desorption might be limiting under the operating conditions.
The study was then extended to Fe and Ru surfaces. The formation of
surface oxide and nitride species on iron blocks the H permeation
and prevents the reaction to advance; while on ruthenium, the stronger
Ru–N bond might favor the recombination of permeating hydrogen
to H2 over the hydrogenation of adsorbed nitrogen. This
work provides insightful results to aid the rational design of efficient
electrolytic NH3 synthesis processes based on but not limited
to hydrogen permeable electrodes.
The electrochemical nitrogen reduction reaction (NRR) is a promising alternative to the current greenhouse-gas-emission intensive process to produce ammonia (NH3) from nitrogen (N2). However, finding an electrocatalyst that promotes NRR over the competing hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) has proven to be difficult. This difficulty could potentially be addressed by accelerating the electrocatalyst development for NRR by orders of magnitude using high-throughput (HTP) workflows. In this work, we developed a HTP gas diffusion electrode (GDE) cell to screen up to 16 electrocatalysts in parallel. The key innovation of the cell is the use of expanded Polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) gas diffusion layers (GDL) which simplifies the handling of catalyst arrays compared to carbon fabrics and enables sufficient N2 mass transport. We demonstrate the robustness of the HTP workflow by screening 528 bimetallic catalysts of composition AB (A,B = Ag, Al, Au, Co, Cu, Fe, Mn , Mo, Ni, Pd, Re, Ru, W) for NRR activity. None of the materials produced ammonia significantly over background level which emphasizes the difficulty of finding active electrocatalysts for NRR and narrows down the search space for future studies.
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