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Nitrogen reduction to ammonia at high efficiency and rates based on a phosphonium proton shuttle

journal contribution
posted on 2021-06-11, 00:00 authored by B H R Suryanto, K Matuszek, J Choi, R Y Hodgetts, H L Du, J M Bakker, Colin Kang, P V Cherepanov, A N Simonov, D R MacFarlane
Ammonia (NH3) is a globally important commodity for fertilizer production, but its synthesis by the Haber-Bosch process causes substantial emissions of carbon dioxide. Alternative, zero-carbon emission NH3 synthesis methods being explored include the promising electrochemical lithium-mediated nitrogen reduction reaction, which has nonetheless required sacrificial sources of protons. In this study, a phosphonium salt is introduced as a proton shuttle to help resolve this limitation. The salt also provides additional ionic conductivity, enabling high NH3 production rates of 53 ± 1 nanomoles per second per square centimeter at 69 ± 1% faradaic efficiency in 20-hour experiments under 0.5-bar hydrogen and 19.5-bar nitrogen. Continuous operation for more than 3 days is demonstrated.

History

Journal

Science

Volume

372

Issue

6547

Pagination

1187 - 1191

ISSN

0036-8075

eISSN

1095-9203

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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