Selective electrocatalytic nitrate-to-ammonia conversion holds significant potential in treatment of nitrate wastewater and simultaneously produces high-value-added ammonia. However, today's development of nitrate-to-ammonia technology remains hindered by the lack of electrocatalysts… Click to show full abstract
Selective electrocatalytic nitrate-to-ammonia conversion holds significant potential in treatment of nitrate wastewater and simultaneously produces high-value-added ammonia. However, today's development of nitrate-to-ammonia technology remains hindered by the lack of electrocatalysts with high activity and selectivity. In this work, metal-organic framework-derived CuPd bimetallic nanoparticles/nitrogen-doped carbon (CuPd/CN) hybrid nanoarrays for efficient ammonia electrosynthesis from nitrate are designed and synthesized. Systematic characterization reveals that the electronic metal-support interaction between the CuPd nanoparticles and N-doped nanocarbon matrix could trigger interfacial charge polarization over the CuPd/CN composite and make Cu sites electron deficient, which is conducive to the adsorption of nitrate ions. Moreover, the Pd atom sites separate by Cu atoms and could catalyze the dissociation of H2 O molecules to form adsorbed H species, which evolves into hydrogen radicals and behaves as the dominant reactive species in accelerating nitrate-to-ammonia electrocatalysis. These advantages endow the CuPd/CN nanoarrays with high faradaic efficiency (96.16%), selectivity (92.08%) as well as excellent catalytic stability for electroreduction of nitrate to ammonia.
               
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