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Tandem electrocatalytic N2 fixation via proton-coupled electron transfer

Author

Listed:
  • Pablo Garrido-Barros

    (California Institute of Technology)

  • Joseph Derosa

    (California Institute of Technology)

  • Matthew J. Chalkley

    (California Institute of Technology
    University of California)

  • Jonas C. Peters

    (California Institute of Technology)

Abstract

New electrochemical ammonia (NH3) synthesis technologies are of interest as a complementary route to the Haber–Bosch process for distributed fertilizer generation, and towards exploiting ammonia as a zero-carbon fuel produced via renewably sourced electricity1. Apropos of these goals is a surge of fundamental research targeting heterogeneous materials as electrocatalysts for the nitrogen reduction reaction (N2RR)2. These systems generally suffer from poor stability and NH3 selectivity; the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) outcompetes N2RR3. Molecular catalyst systems can be exquisitely tuned and offer an alternative strategy4, but progress has been thwarted by the same selectivity issue; HER dominates. Here we describe a tandem catalysis strategy that offers a solution to this puzzle. A molecular complex that can mediate an N2 reduction cycle is partnered with a co-catalyst that interfaces the electrode and an acid to mediate proton-coupled electron transfer steps, facilitating N−H bond formation at a favourable applied potential (−1.2 V versus Fc+/0) and overall thermodynamic efficiency. Certain intermediates of the N2RR cycle would be otherwise unreactive via uncoupled electron transfer or proton transfer steps. Structurally diverse complexes of several metals (W, Mo, Os, Fe) also mediate N2RR electrocatalysis at the same potential in the presence of the mediator, pointing to the generality of this tandem approach.

Suggested Citation

  • Pablo Garrido-Barros & Joseph Derosa & Matthew J. Chalkley & Jonas C. Peters, 2022. "Tandem electrocatalytic N2 fixation via proton-coupled electron transfer," Nature, Nature, vol. 609(7925), pages 71-76, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:609:y:2022:i:7925:d:10.1038_s41586-022-05011-6
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05011-6
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    Cited by:

    1. Satoshi Takebayashi & Jama Ariai & Urs Gellrich & Sergey V. Kartashov & Robert R. Fayzullin & Hyung-Been Kang & Takeshi Yamane & Kenji Sugisaki & Kazunobu Sato, 2023. "Synthesis and characterization of a formal 21-electron cobaltocene derivative," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 14(1), pages 1-10, December.
    2. Soumen Sinhababu & Roushan Prakash Singh & Maxim R. Radzhabov & Jugal Kumawat & Daniel H. Ess & Neal P. Mankad, 2024. "Coordination-induced O-H/N-H bond weakening by a redox non-innocent, aluminum-containing radical," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-7, December.

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