Constructing AgNi biphase catalysts with a hierarchical pore structure for efficient nitrate reduction to ammonia at low potentials
Abstract
The electrocatalytic nitrate reduction to ammonia (NO3RR) offers an energy-saving and environmentally friendly technological pathway as an alternative to the traditional high-energy-consumption and high-emission Haber–Bosch process. The hydrogen-assisted reduction pathway in the NO3RR has gradually become a research hotspot due to its significant advantages in both selectivity and reaction kinetics. To suppress the competing hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), catalysts designed based on this pathway typically facilitate the NO3RR process at low overpotentials. Therefore, achieving high-current NO3RR catalysis at low overpotentials has become the key challenge for the practical application of the hydrogen-assisted reduction pathway. Herein, we designed and constructed a 7Ag3Ni bimetallic catalyst with a hierarchical pore structure through a combined dissolution-pore-forming and electrochemical corrosion approach. Benefiting from the engineered porosity, the catalyst enables high-current-density electrocatalytic NO3RR at low potentials. The 7Ag3Ni bimetallic catalyst exhibits exceptional electrocatalytic performance with a high current density of 400 mA cm−2 at −0.38 V vs. RHE, achieving an outstanding ammonia production rate of 32.6 mg h−1 cm−2 and a remarkable 93.5% faradaic efficiency for NH3 generation. Electrocatalytic mechanism studies reveal that in the 7Ag3Ni bimetallic catalyst, Ag governs the two-electron transfer process from NO3− to NO2−, while Ni provides active sites for hydrogen-adsorbate species, enabling rapid conversion of NO2− to NH3 through the hydrogen-assisted reduction pathway.

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