Premium
Hierarchical Cobalt Phosphide Hollow Nanocages toward Electrocatalytic Ammonia Synthesis under Ambient Pressure and Room Temperature
Author(s) -
Guo Wenhan,
Liang Zibin,
Zhao Junliang,
Zhu Bingjun,
Cai Kunting,
Zou Ruqiang,
Xu Qiang
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
small methods
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.66
H-Index - 46
ISSN - 2366-9608
DOI - 10.1002/smtd.201800204
Subject(s) - nanocages , electrocatalyst , catalysis , ammonia production , prussian blue , electrochemistry , materials science , inorganic chemistry , chemical engineering , noble metal , cobalt , water splitting , reversible hydrogen electrode , electrolysis , ambient pressure , chemistry , electrode , electrolyte , working electrode , engineering , biochemistry , physics , photocatalysis , thermodynamics
Electrochemical nitrogen reduction reaction (NRR) under room temperature and ambient pressure is a promising energy‐ and environmental‐friendly method for ammonia synthesis, which currently highly relies on the energy‐consuming Haber‐Bosch process with enormous CO 2 emissions. This study reports the synthesis of a noble‐metal‐free CoP hollow nanocage (CoP HNC) catalyst from a metal‐organic framework precursor through a layered‐double‐hydroxide intermediate, and the use as the cathode for electrochemical NRR. The 3D hierarchical nanoparticle–nanosheet–nanocage structure provides rich surface active sites for nitrogen adsorption and reduction. When applied for NRR, CoP HNC exhibits exciting performance with high Faraday efficiency at low overpotentials (7.36% at 0 V vs reversible hydrogen electrode [RHE]), and the ammonia yield rate increases exponentially at more negative potential, reaching 10.78 µg h −1 at −0.4 V (vs RHE) with good selectivity (no hydrazine produced) under ambient conditions. This noble‐metal‐free electrocatalyst with promising performance demonstrates the unique potential of transition metal and their compounds in the field of NRR, providing new perspectives to rational catalyst design and mechanism study.