Ruhan Wang
ab,
Xiaofu Sun
*ab and
Buxing Han
*ab
aBeijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, CAS Laboratory of Colloid and Interface and Thermodynamics, CAS Research/Education Center for Excellence in Molecular Sciences, Center for Carbon Neutral Chemistry, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China. E-mail: sunxiaofu@iccas.ac.cn; hanbx@iccas.ac.cn
bSchool of Chemical Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
First published on 6th August 2025
Electrocatalytic C–N coupling reactions involving NOx species (NO3−, NO2−, and NO) have emerged as a sustainable approach for synthesizing high-value nitrogen-containing chemicals. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the recent advances in catalyst design strategies for enhancing the efficiency and selectivity of NOx-involved C–N bond formation. Five key strategies are categorized and discussed: defect engineering, coordination environment design, interface engineering, dual-site synergy, and emerging architectures. Regarding each strategy, representative literature cases are summarized to illustrate mechanistic insights and practical applications. By addressing challenges such as intermediate instability, low selectivity, and competing side reactions, these strategies demonstrate great potential for advancing electrocatalytic C–N coupling toward practical implementation. Finally, future directions are proposed, including dynamic catalyst design, microenvironment regulation, and data-driven catalyst screening.
Electrocatalytic C–N coupling reactions, particularly those involving nitrogen oxides (NOx, including NO, NO2−, and NO3−),32–36 have emerged as a transformative research frontier in green chemical synthesis.37–40 Unlike conventional thermal catalytic processes, which typically require harsh reaction conditions41 and high energy inputs,19 the electrocatalytic pathway leverages renewable electricity to directly couple reactive nitrogen species with diverse carbon-based substrates, including CO2 and its electroreduction-derived intermediates, aldehydes and ketones, and biomass-derived active intermediates, offering a sustainable alternative to traditional thermochemical approaches. The resulting products encompass a broad spectrum of important chemicals, such as oximes,42–44 amino acids,45–47 amines,48–50 amides,51–53 urea54–57 and heterocyclic compounds (Fig. 1), which are essential intermediates in agriculture, pharmaceuticals, materials, and environmental remediation.58
Among these versatile transformations, several representative NOx-involved C–N coupling reactions have been intensively studied. For instance, reductive amination reactions involving nitrate or nitrite and carbonyl substrates afford high-value oximes, amines, amino acids, etc.59–61 Similarly, the electrochemical synthesis of urea from CO2 and NOx provides an attractive route to sustainably produce urea fertilizers.62 These C–N coupling reactions expand the scope of green electrosynthesis to complex organic molecules traditionally synthesized using multi-step pathways.63–67
In recent years, substantial progress has been made in identifying suitable substrates and demonstrating the feasibility of electrochemical C–N coupling reactions.68 Meanwhile, aided by advances in theoretical modelling, computational simulations and in situ/operando characterization techniques, electrochemical catalysis has enabled researchers to gain deeper insights into the composition and configuration of key intermediates, evaluating their binding affinities and regulating the catalytic activity and product selectivity of these systems.69–76 However, due to the multi-step electron/proton transfer processes, as well as various reactive chemical bonds, active intermediates, and competing reaction pathways, these reactions become more complex.32,71,77 A central challenge lies in controlling the reaction selectivity and preventing side reactions such as hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), over-hydrogenation, and undesired side-reaction.78–81 Consequently, minor fluctuations in the electrode surface properties,82–85 active intermediate binding energies,86 or local reaction microenvironments87–89 can drastically alter the product distribution and overall reaction efficiency.8,71 Furthermore, achieving simultaneous optimal adsorption and activation of disparate reactants (such as NOx and carbon sources) poses significant challenges.90–92 Different reactants typically require different binding sites and distinct electronic environments, making it difficult to align the reaction pathways on single-site or homogeneous catalyst surfaces.93 At the same time, conventional catalyst designs rely on static structures, which fail to accommodate the dynamic structural and electronic changes occurring during electrocatalysis.94 If these mechanistic and catalytic challenges are not effectively solved, they would severely hinder the transition of electrocatalytic C–N coupling processes from laboratory-scale demonstrations to practical, large-scale applications.
Thus, to overcome these intrinsic mechanistic limitations and to further enhance the performance of electrocatalytic NOx-involved C–N coupling reactions, researchers have proposed five representative catalyst engineering strategies (Fig. 2), including defect engineering, coordination environment design, interface engineering, dual-site synergy and emerging architectures. By resolving challenges such as the instability of the reactive intermediates, the occurrence of competing side reactions, and the mismatch in substrate adsorption requirements, these approaches collectively enhance the effectiveness of C–N bond construction under electrochemical conditions.
In this paper, we provide a comprehensive overview of electrocatalytic C–N coupling reactions involving NOx species from the perspective of catalyst design strategies. We systematically categorize the recent advances into five major approaches including defect engineering, coordination environment design, interface engineering, dual-site synergy, and emerging architectures. These strategies can regulate the structural and electronic characteristics, helping to resolve key issues in intermediate stabilization, substrate adsorption and reaction selectivity. In addition, the last section outlines the challenges and development prospects for NOx-involved C–N coupling. We believe that this review can inspire new exploration and principles for catalyst design for electrocatalytic C–N coupling reactions.
The second category is coordination environment design, emphasizing the adjustment of the local atomic arrangement around the active metal center (Fig. 2b). Through rational tuning of the metal–ligand interactions, heteroatom incorporation, and coordination asymmetry, catalysts are able to influence the intermediate adsorption behavior and energy barriers, thereby promoting more selective and efficient C–N bond formation.95
Interface engineering, as the third major strategy, focuses on regulating the physicochemical properties at the boundary between different phases to construct favorable local microenvironments at the interface between the electrode and electrolyte (Fig. 2c). By tuning the interfacial characteristics such as surface polarity, wettability, and spatial distribution of reactants, this approach can facilitate selective intermediate enrichment, improve the mass transport, and spatially separate the reaction steps.44 As a result, interface engineering electrocatalytic systems often demonstrate improved reaction selectivity, enhanced stability, and better compatibility with complex multi-step C–N coupling processes.
Dual-site synergy enhances the performance of NOx-involved C–N coupling reactions by integrating two types of catalytic active centers with complementary effects in a single system (Fig. 2d). Typically, one site promotes the activation of nitrogen-containing species, while the other is responsible for the activation of carbon-containing species.96 The spatial proximity and electronic complementarity between the two sites promote synergistic adsorption, efficient intermediate transfer, and selective C–N bond formation.97 This cooperative mechanism improves overall reaction coordination, lowers the energy barrier, and helps to suppress undesirable side reactions, thereby contributing to improved activity and selectivity in complex multistep transformations.
Emerging architectures introduce a new design perspective, emphasizing the adaptability and responsiveness (Fig. 2e). Rather than relying solely on rigid structural parameters, this strategy focuses on dynamic regulation of the active sites and structural evolution during the reaction process,98 offering opportunities to balance the activity and selectivity across complex pathways and opening up new directions for intelligent, programmable and multi-step coupling catalytic platforms.
Xian and co-workers developed a catalyst based on atomically dispersed Fe–N4 sites anchored in a nitrogen-doped carbon matrix (AD-Fe/NC), aiming to achieve precise control over amino acid electrosynthesis via defect-engineered local electronic redistribution.60 In the AD-Fe/NC catalyst, the Fe–N4 centers act as electron-deficient sites, where potential-driven orbital rearrangement enhances NO adsorption and facilitates the formation of key intermediates (Fig. 3a), thereby promoting the C–N coupling step. Under an applied potential of −0.6 V vs. reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE), the catalyst achieved a valine yield of 32.1 μmol mgcat−1 with a selectivity of 11.3%, demonstrating excellent capability for the high-value conversion of nitrogen oxides.
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Fig. 3 (a) In situ Fe K-edge XANES spectra of AD-Fe/NC under applied potentials from OCV to −1.0 V vs. RHE. The white-line intensity attenuation at −1.0 V indicates Fe valence reduction during reductive amination.60 Reproduced with permission from ref. 60, Copyright © 2023, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (b) Gibbs free energy change (ΔG) for CO2 reduction to *OCHO intermediate and subsequent C–N coupling on Pd/Cu-VCu.99 (c) Comparative Gibbs free energy profiles for DMF synthesis on pure Cu, Cu-VCu, and Pd/Cu-VCu surfaces.99 Reproduced with permission from ref. 99, Copyright © 2024, Elsevier Inc. (d) Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of c-OD-Cu and e-OD-Cu. The distinct signal at g = 1.997 for e-OD-Cu indicates the presence of unpaired electrons trapped at copper vacancy sites, while no significant signal is observed for c-OD-Cu.100 (e) Schematic of the tandem electrochemical-chemical pathway for electrocatalytic HMTA synthesis from nitrate and formaldehyde.100 Reproduced with permission from ref. 100, Copyright © 2024, the American Chemical Society. (f) Free energy profiles for urea synthesis pathways on electron-deficient Cu (Cu/PI-500).101 Reproduced with permission from ref. 101, Copyright © 2024, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (g) Schematic of oxygen vacancy (VO)-mediated reaction pathway switching on CeO2.102 Reproduced with permission from ref. 102, Copyright © 2022, the American Chemical Society. (h) Free energy profile for nitrogen reduction reaction (NRR) elementary steps on *C-modified ReMn-NC.101 Reproduced with permission from ref. 101, Copyright © 2024, Elsevier Inc. (i) Urea yield rates under applied potential for Cu–C, Cu97In3-C, Cu30In70-C, and In–C electrocatalysts.62 (j) Urea yield rates and CO/HCOO− molar ratios across bimetallic Cu–In, Cu–Bi, and Cu–Sn electrocatalysts.62 Reproduced with permission from ref. 62, Copyright © 2023, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (k) FE of the production for NS-CNS (blue), CNS (red).104 Reproduced with permission from ref. 104, Copyright © 2023, Elsevier. |
Fan et al. developed a Pd/Cu-VCu electrocatalyst based on defect engineering by introducing Cu vacancies to modulate the local electronic structure of Cu nanosheets,99 which exhibited remarkable activity for the electrochemical synthesis of N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) from CO2 and dimethylamine (DMA). The introduction of Cu vacancies (Cu-VCu) into the Cu nanosheets modulated their local electronic structure, significantly enhancing CO2 adsorption and facilitating spontaneous coupling with DMA to form C–N bonds (Fig. 3b). Concurrently, Pd nanoparticles accelerated the electrochemical reduction of the key intermediate *OCN(CH3)2OH to OCHN(CH3)2OH, thereby markedly improving the overall efficiency of DMF formation (Fig. 3c). Under an applied potential of −0.6 V vs. RHE, the catalyst achieved a high DMF yield of 385 mmol h−1 gcat−1 and a faradaic efficiency (FE) of 37.5%. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations further revealed that the introduction of copper vacancies led to electronic redistribution, which reduced the energy barriers for C–N bond formation, facilitated proton-coupled electron transfer, and enhanced the kinetics of intermediate hydrogenation.
Pan and co-authors developed vacancy-rich electrochemically oxidation-derived copper (e-OD-Cu) for the efficient synthesis of hexamethylenetetramine (HMTA) via electrochemical C–N coupling between nitrate and formaldehyde.100 The presence of Cu vacancies significantly enhanced the adsorption of NO3− and HCHO, thereby facilitating the initial steps of the reaction cascade (Fig. 3d). The nitrate was first reduced to *NH3 through a multi-electron pathway, which then reacted with *HCHO to form imine-type intermediates (Fig. 3e). Notably, the Cu vacancies played a critical role in suppressing the over-hydrogenation of the *CH2NH intermediate, effectively steering the reaction away from undesired byproducts and enabling the progressive formation of multi-substituted amine intermediates. This promoted tandem condensation and ring-closing reactions, which ultimately yielded HMTA with an FE of 74.9% and yield of 76.8% at −0.30 V vs. RHE.
Wang et al. constructed electron-deficient Cu sites via strong metal-polyimide (PI) semiconductor interactions (named Cu/PI-X catalyst, where X represents the thermal treatment temperature on PI), enabling efficient urea synthesis through the electrocatalytic coupling of nitrate and carbon dioxide.101 The electron-deficient Cu/PI-500 significantly enhanced the co-adsorption of *NO and *CO intermediates and stabilized the key intermediates (e.g. *ONCONO), thus reducing the reaction energy barriers for sequential C–N bond formation (Fig. 3f). Cu/PI-500 delivered a high urea yield rate of 255.0 mmol h−1 g−1 and FE of 14.3% at −1.4 V vs. RHE, with outstanding electrochemical durability.
Wei et al. developed a CeO2-supported Cu catalyst enriched with oxygen vacancies (VO-CeO2-750) to enable the electrocatalytic coupling of nitrate and carbon dioxide for urea synthesis.102 The introduction of Vo sites significantly reshaped the local electronic structure of CeO2, enabling strong stabilization of the *NO intermediate and favoring its coupling with *CO to form the key *OCNO species (Fig. 3g). By anchoring the *NO intermediates via VO, the catalyst raises the *NO hydrogenation barriers by 0.12 eV, while reducing the *NO–*CO coupling barriers to 0.27 eV (48% decrease). As a result, the catalyst achieved a high urea yield of 8.81 mmol h−1 gcat−1 and FE of 12.2% at −0.7 V vs. RHE.
Zhang and co-workers proposed a “Janus C–N coupling” strategy for the selective synthesis of ammonia and urea under ambient conditions, using nitrogen, carbon dioxide, water and electricity as feedstocks.103 Specifically, an Re–Mn dual-atomic electrocatalyst (ReMn-NC) with strong CO adsorption was constructed, facilitating the formation of *C intermediates, which acted as electron reservoirs. These electron-rich *C species promoted end-on adsorption and subsequent C–N coupling with nitrogen (N2 + *C → *CN2, Fig. 3h). Subsequent hydrogenation of *CN2, accompanied by C–N dissociation, selectively produced ammonia at a remarkable yield of 48.9 mg g−1 h−1 and a nitrogen selectivity of 98.4%. Conversely, a Zn–Mn dual-atomic electrocatalyst (ZnMn-NC) exhibiting low Co binding strength facilitated the release and migration of CO, enabling its coupling with adsorbed nitrogen (CO + *NN* → *NCON*). Subsequent hydrogenation of the nitrogen atoms efficiently yielded urea, achieving an average yield rate of 36.7 mg g−1 h−1 and nitrogen selectivity of 89.1%. Notably, modulating the local electronic states of catalysts significantly influences the electronic density distribution at their active sites, directly affecting the stability and activity of adsorbed species, and thereby facilitating the synergistic development of nitrogen reduction and C–N coupling reactions.
Beyond the aforementioned strategies, modulation of the local electronic states (such as redistribution of localized charge density) constitutes defect engineering at the electronic-structure level. By profoundly altering the adsorption configurations of the intermediates and steering the catalytic reaction pathways, this strategy enables the efficient electrocatalytic synthesis of target chemicals. Liu et al. demonstrated efficient electrocatalytic urea synthesis under ambient conditions by tuning the local electronic state of bimetallic electrocatalysts using CO2 and NO3− reactants.62 They found that the localized surface charge of the catalysts significantly influenced the adsorption configurations of the CO2 intermediates and subsequent reaction pathways. Specifically, the negatively charged Cu97In3-C surface preferentially induced the formation of C-bound *COOH intermediates, greatly enhancing the subsequent C–N coupling reactions and resulting in an impressive urea yield rate of 13.1 mmol g−1 h−1, which is about 13 times higher than that of the positively charged Cu30In70-C surface (dominated by O-bound *OCHO intermediates, as shown in Fig. 3i). Mechanistic studies revealed that the negatively charged surfaces facilitated the stable adsorption of reactive intermediates through the formation of C-bound configurations, significantly improving the urea synthesis performance. Conversely, positively charged surfaces promoted the formation of O-bound intermediates, creating a dead-end for subsequent C–N coupling, and thus substantially reducing the urea yield (Fig. 3j). This precise regulation of the adsorption configurations and reaction pathways via localized electronic state tuning exemplifies the critical role of defect engineering in electrocatalytic urea synthesis.
Jia et al. utilized a defect engineering strategy by developing nitrogen and sulfur co-doped lignin-derived carbon nanosheets (NS-CNS) for the efficient electrocatalytic reductive amination of pyruvate to alanine.104 Co-doping with nitrogen and sulfur effectively modulated the localized electronic states on the catalyst surface, significantly enhancing the local electron density distribution at the carbon active sites, thereby improving the adsorption affinity toward the critical imine intermediates and lowering the reaction energy barrier. Specifically, the localized electron-rich sites facilitated the rapid reduction of the imine intermediates to alanine, while simultaneously suppressing competing side reactions, such as hydrogen evolution. Under the optimized reaction conditions (−0.3 V vs. RHE), the NS-CNS catalyst exhibited an impressive FE of 79.5% with the alanine yield reaching up to 199 mmol h−1 cm−2 and selectivity exceeding 99.9% (Fig. 3k). Additionally, the catalyst demonstrated remarkable stability for long-term electrocatalytic processes and showed excellent potential for practical applications, as evidenced by successfully converting real-world polylactic acid waste into value-added alanine with selectivity greater than 75%.
Kang and co-workers proposed an interfacial coordination strategy by anchoring a Zn-based metal–organic framework (ZIF-7) onto carboxyl-functionalized graphite felt (CGF), which was named ZIF-7/CGF,43 where Zn–O bridges were formed between the MOF and the substrate. This modification induced the transformation of the Zn coordination environment from a symmetric Zn–N4 tetrahedral configuration to an asymmetric Zn-N3O structure. In situ XAFS analysis revealed that the Zn sites underwent in situ reconstruction, characterized by a reduction in the Zn coordination number from 4.0 to 3.3 and an increase in the average Zn–ligand bond length (Fig. 4a). Compared with the conventional Zn–N4 sites, the Zn-N3O configuration not only enhanced the NO adsorption capacity but also facilitated the formation and desorption of the NH2OH intermediate, thereby promoting the key C–N coupling pathway.
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Fig. 4 (a) Fitting curves recorded at the Zn K-edge under working conditions.43 Reproduced with permission from, ref. 43 Copyright © 2025, Springer Nature. (b) Time-dependent in situ ATR-SEIRAS was carried out using isotopically labeled 15NO2− as the N source and H2O as the H donor.42 Reproduced with permission from ref. 42, Copyright © 2023, Springer Nature. (c) PDOS of HEA-PdCuAgBiIn with the p–d orbital hybridization given in the inset.95 Reproduced with permission from ref. 95, Copyright © 2024, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (d) Distribution of aluminum coordination states in Al-NFM.105 Reproduced with permission from ref. 105, Copyright © 2023, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (e) Schematic of the synthesis of 4-CBOE from NO and 4-CB.106 Reproduced with permission from ref. 106, Copyright © 2024, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (f) Projected density of states (PDOS) and total density of states (TDOS) plots of adFe-TiOx/Ti.107 Reproduced with permission from ref. 107, Copyright © 2024, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (g) Comparison of FEAla/FEPO ratios over OD-Ag and commercial Ag nanoparticles (c-Ag NPs) during NO and pyruvic acid electrolysis. The gradually increasing FEAla/FEPO ratio over OD-Ag with accumulated charge highlights its superior activity in oxime (PO) reduction, while c-Ag NPs show limited conversion efficiency.47 Reproduced with permission from ref. 47, Copyright © 2023, Springer Nature. (h) Electrostatic potential (ESP) analysis for CuPc-Amino and CuPc.108 (i) Electronic charge redistribution patterns examined through Hirshfeld charges analysis for CuPc-Amino relative to its unsubstituted CuPc.108 (j) Urea synthesis partial current densities for both CuPc-Amino and CuPc catalysts measured across a range of applied potentials.108 Reproduced with permission from ref. 108, Copyright © 2024, Springer Nature. |
Wu et al. reported a sulfur-modified copper electrocatalyst (Cu–S) that leverages interface engineering to precisely regulate the surface reaction environment for electrochemical C–N coupling between nitrite and cyclohexanone, attaining a remarkable product selectivity of 99% and yield of 92% at −0.9 V vs. Ag/AgCl.42 The superior performance originated from the tailored Cu–S coordination structure, which modulated the electronic configuration of the Cu active sites. The appearance of the Cu–S configuration weakened the over-reduction of NH2OH*. In situ ATR-SEIRAS spectroscopy (Fig. 4b) further demonstrated that NH2OH* remains stably adsorbed on the surface and undergoes direct coupling with cyclohexanone, enabling selective oxime formation.
Sheng et al. constructed a porous high-entropy alloy metallene catalyst (HEA-PdCuAgBiInene), which demonstrates an effective coordination environment modulation strategy for promoting C–N coupling electrosynthesis.95 The incorporation of p-block metals (Bi, In) into the PdCuAg matrix induces unconventional p–d orbital hybridization, which leads to local electron enrichment and d-state localization at the Pd active sites (Fig. 4c). This tailored coordination environment fine-tunes the adsorption energies of hydrogen and NO2−-derived intermediates, suppresses the over-hydrogenation of NH2OH*, and facilitates its selective condensation with surface-enriched cyclohexanone (C6H10O*). The HEA catalyst achieved an FE of 47.6% and nearly 100% yield under mild electrochemical conditions (−0.9 V vs. Ag/AgCl), offering a compelling example of active-site engineering via orbital-level coordination control.
Xiang et al. developed an aluminum-containing nanofiber membrane catalyst (Al-NFM) derived from NH2-MIL-53(Al)105 for the electrosynthesis of pyridine oximes via the in situ reduction of NO2− to NH2OH*. The catalyst possesses a highly disordered carbon structure with abundant defect sites and a mixture of six-, five-, and four-coordinated Al centers, of which approximately 20% are coordinatively unsaturated. These Al–N motifs modulate the local electronic environment, promote NO2− activation, and stabilize the NH2OH* intermediate, as supported by the charge distribution analysis and energy profile calculations (Fig. 4d). The absence of Al or nitrogen doping led to significantly lower NH2OH yields and reduced product selectivity, underscoring the essential role of coordination tuning. Operating at −0.9 V vs. Ag/AgCl under ambient conditions, Al-NFM achieved an FE of 42.1% and 92.1% selectivity.
Wang and co-authors reported a one-pot electrosynthesis strategy for the production of oxime ether by NOx reduction and aldehyde activation using ultrafine MgO nanoparticles embedded in nitrogen-doped carbon nanofiber membranes (MgO-SCM).106 The electrosynthesis process targets the efficient one-pot conversion of NOx and 4-cyanobenzaldehyde (4-CB) to 4-cyanobenzaldoxime (4-CBO), and subsequently to its oxime ether (4-CBOE) under ambient conditions, as shown in Fig. 4e. In this system, the catalyst is derived from Mg-MOFs, and the Mg–O coordination structure was largely preserved during thermal decomposition, forming well-dispersed MgO active sites. This preserved coordination environment generated abundant acid–base pairs on the surface of MgO, which played a key role in steering the NOx reduction pathway, while the highly dispersed MgO nanoparticles embedded in the N-doped carbon matrix facilitate preferential NO adsorption, limiting the HER activity. This fine control over surface coordination enables the production of 4-CBOE with 93% selectivity and 65.1% FE at 12 mA.
Zhu and co-authors developed an atomically dispersed iron-supported defect TiO2 electrocatalyst (adFe-TiOx/Ti) that synergistically integrates oxygen vacancies (OVs) and isolated Fe sites to facilitate C–N coupling reactions for α-amino acid synthesis.107 The defect-rich TiO2 matrix was designed to introduce a large number of OVs, while Fe atoms were anchored at these vacant positions to form a uniformly dispersed Fe–O coordination structure. The formation of Fe–O3 complexes enhances the electronic interaction between Fe and the defective oxide support (Fig. 4f). OVs promoted the adsorption of nitric acid (NO3−), glyoxylic acid (GA) and glyoxylic oxime (GO), while adFe significantly reduced the energy barrier for the conversion of NO3− to NH2OH and GO to glycine. A glycine yield of 80.2% was achieved using the adFe-TiOx/Ti catalyst with GA conversion close to 100%.
Li et al. developed a coordination-modulated Ag-based catalyst to realize the electrosynthesis of alanine from NO and pyruvic acid.47 The oxide-derived Ag (OD-Ag) exhibits a reduced average coordination number (CN ≈ 7.2), which leads to under-coordinated Ag sites with altered surface electronic structures. These modified coordination environments enable the stronger adsorption of the oxime intermediates and lower the energy barriers for the key transformation step, including N–O bond cleavage and CN hydrogenation. Compared to commercial Ag nanoparticles, OD-Ag significantly boosts the pyruvate oxime (PO)-to-alanine conversion rate, while suppressing side HER processes (Fig. 4g). The coordination-induced activity enhancement is further supported by DFT calculations, showing favorable charge redistribution and reduced activation energy on low-coordinated sites.
The in research by Li and co-workers, they utilized the ligand engineering strategy exemplified by CuPc-amino, demonstrating how coordination environment modulation enhances electrocatalytic urea synthesis.108 Amino substitution strengthens the intramolecular Cu–N coordination (coordination number increased from 3.9 to 4.2), while simultaneously optimizing the electronic structure through the reduction of the Cu site electrostatic potential from 20.41 to 5.64 kcal mol−1 (Fig. 4h). This coordination environment modification effectively suppresses electrochemical demetallation and promotes the adsorption of the key *CO and *NO intermediates for C–N coupling (Fig. 4i). The engineered CuPc-amino catalyst achieved a remarkable urea yield rate of 103.1 ± 5.3 mmol h−1 g−1 at −1.6 V vs. RHE (Fig. 4j), representing a 2.6-fold improvement over unmodified CuPc, while maintaining near-zero activity decay over 10 cycles compared to the 67.4% decay observed for CuPc.
A representative example of multiphase interface design is the Pickering emulsion droplet-integrated electrode developed by Zhang et al., which enables the continuous-flow electrosynthesis of cyclohexanone oxime from NO and cyclohexanone.44 In this system, the catalyst Ag-50 is composed of silver nanoparticles modified by polypyrrole, which has both the functions of a catalyst and a Pickering emulsifier. It assembles at the oil–water interface and stabilizes the emulsion microreactor on the electrode surface (Fig. 5a). The interface environment promotes the selective enrichment and alignment of the oil phase cyclohexanone and water phase NH2OH. In situ ATR-FTIR (Fig. 5b) and Raman spectroscopy (Fig. 5c) revealed an asymmetric hydrogen-bonding network formed by interfacial water, aligning the cyclohexanone molecules vertically on the surface and promoting nucleophilic attack by NH2OH. This unique interfacial configuration enhances the nucleophilic attack of NH2OH and suppresses its over-reduction to NH3, thereby improving the C–N coupling efficiency. Under industrial-level current densities (100 mA cm−2), the system achieved an FE of 83.8% and yield of 0.78 mmol h−1 cm−2. Further immobilization of the emulsion droplets using polypyrrole cross-linking allowed the gram-scale synthesis of oxime in continuous flow, highlighting the power of interfacial engineering in biphasic electrocatalysis.
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Fig. 5 (a) Illustration of a continuous-flow system for cyclohexanone oxime synthesis enabled by electrode-integrated Pickering emulsions. The structured oil–water interface formed by the emulsion droplets offers a confined reaction environment that facilitates efficient oxime formation at high current densities.44 (b and c) Raman and in situ FTIR were employed to probe the oil–water interfacial region in the Pickering emulsion system, revealing the hydrogen-bonding network and the adsorption configuration of cyclohexanone.44 Reproduced with permission from ref. 44, Copyright © 2025, Springer Nature. (d) Illustration mechanisms of the cyclohexanone hydrogenation reaction (CHR) pathways on Pd and Fe surfaces, highlighting differences in intermediate adsorption and hydrogenation tendencies at the interface.78 (e) Line sweep voltammetry (LSV) curves comparing the hydrogen evolution (HER) and CHR performance on Pd and Fe electrodes.78 (f) Calculated free energy diagrams of the CHR on Pd(111) and Fe(111) surfaces.76 Reproduced with permission from ref. 78, Copyright © 2023, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (g) Schematic of the adsorption of cyclohexanone on different catalysts’ surfaces.59 (h) Free energy of cyclohexanone intermediates on the Cu (111) and Pt (111) models.61 (i) Time-dependent kinetic profile for cyclohexanone oxime formation on Cu at −0.9 V (top), and schematic of the phenol-to-oxime reaction pathway (bottom).61 (j) GC results and photos of reaction products.61 Reproduced with permission from ref. 61, Copyright © 2024, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (k) Possible reaction pathway for the electrooxidation of CH3OH and NH3 coupling to form HCONH2 on BDD.110 Reproduced with permission from ref. 110, Copyright © 2022, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (l) Theoretical model of formamide formation pathways on the surface of α-PtO2.111 Reproduced with permission from ref. 111, Copyright © 2022, Springer Nature. |
Wu et al. designed a biphasic electrochemical system for the synthesis of cyclohexanone oxime from NOx and cyclohexanone (CYC), achieving a nearly 100% yield on Fe-based electrocatalysts under flow conditions.78 In this system, NOx and CYC from two immiscible phases accumulate simultaneously on the Fe surface, forming *NH2OH and *CYC as adsorbed intermediates (Fig. 5d). Fe exhibits stronger adsorption for CYC but weaker hydrogenation ability compared to Pd (Fig. 5e), thus preventing over-reduction and ensuring *CYC availability for C–N coupling. Meanwhile, DFT calculations show that *NH2OH desorption is energetically favored over its reduction to NH3 (Fig. 5f), enabling its coupling with *CYC to form the oxime product. This spatial separation and enrichment effect at the interface enhances the C–N coupling selectivity.
Jia and co-workers reported a well-designed interfacial electrocatalytic system using an oxide-derived Cu catalyst for the synthesis of cyclohexanone oxime from phenol and hydroxylamine.61 The Cu catalyst effectively balances the adsorption and activation of H2O, phenol, and NH2OH at the liquid–solid interface. Moderate adsorption of the in situ-formed cyclohexanone enables efficient coupling with NH2OH, while suppressing its over-reduction to cyclohexanol (Fig. 5g). In addition, weak binding of the oxime product facilitates rapid desorption, avoiding further hydrogenation (Fig. 5h and i). These features enable a high FE (69.1%) and a phenol-to-oxime conversion rate of 97.5% at −0.9 V. In addition to its high selectivity and FE, this system demonstrated excellent practical applicability under industrially relevant conditions. Using a PEM flow cell at 50 mA cm−2, the production rate of cyclohexanone oxime reached 54.0 g h−1 gcat−1 with a yield exceeding 90.0% and a carbon selectivity above 99.9%. The oxime product could be readily purified by simple separation and drying, affording an isolated yield of 99.9% with high purity (Fig. 5j).
Chen et al. proposed an interfacial regulation strategy based on the cooperative enrichment and coupling of key intermediates to enable the efficient aqueous electrosynthesis of oximes from NOx and aldehyde substrates.59 By tailoring the microenvironment at the Fe-based catalyst-electrolyte interface, this strategy facilitates the simultaneous surface accumulation and spatial proximity of NH2OH and R-CHO, thereby promoting their preferential C–N coupling. The interfacial-specific enrichment of NH2OH, combined with the strong adsorption of R-CHO (desorption energy increased by 23%), effectively suppresses the competing hydrogenation pathways. Moreover, the activation barrier for interfacial C–N coupling (0.32 eV) is significantly lower than that for NH2OH reduction (0.68 eV), enabling a high oxime yield of up to 99%. In the subsequent flow reactor system, enhanced interfacial mass transport further boosts the oxime production rate to 22.8 g h−1 gcat−1.
Jia et al. engineered an MOF-derived Cu-Cu2O heterojunction catalyst (CuxCyOz@600) for efficient hydroxylamine (HA) electrosynthesis via in situ electrochemical reconstruction.29 In this structure, the cooperative interaction between Cu0 and Cu+ at the interface optimizes the key steps in the reaction pathway, particularly facilitating the protonation and desorption of intermediates such as *NO2 and *NH2OH, respectively. The Cu(111)-Cu2O(111) heterointerface plays a pivotal role in modulating the local electronic environment. This interface lowers the desorption energy of *NH2OH and facilitates the protonation of *NO to *NHO via a barrierless process, effectively overcoming the rate-determining step in HA formation. The coexistence of Cu0 and Cu+ species further promotes *NO2 protonation and intermediate stabilization, enabling highly selective CP-O generation.
Shao et al. developed a scalable electrosynthetic system for converting methanol and ammonia into formamide via C–N coupling over a boron-doped diamond (BDD) electrode,110 achieving an FE of 41.2% and selectivity of 73.2% at a current density of 120 mA cm−2. The BDD electrode provides an inert liquid–solid interface that supports the oxidation of methanol to aldehyde-like species. Systematic tuning of the CH3OH/NH3 molar ratio and electrolyte pH demonstrated that modulating the local interfacial environment is key to enhancing the formamide selectivity and suppressing side reactions. The reaction pathway was further elucidated by analyzing the electrochemical behavior of model intermediates, where Fig. 5k confirms the oxidation of methanol to formaldehyde-like species as a prerequisite for C–N coupling.
Meng et al. developed a sustainable electrooxidation strategy to synthesize formamide under ambient conditions, offering an alternative to traditional high-temperature, high-pressure synthesis routes, achieving an FE of 40.39% and product selectivity of 74.26% under 100 mA cm−2 reaction conditions.111 By employing a Pt electrocatalyst, particularly its oxidized α-PtO2 surface phase, the system facilitates the formation and stabilization of aldehyde-like intermediates from methanol oxidation (Fig. 5l). These intermediates are subsequently attacked by ammonia through a nucleophilic pathway to generate formamide. The spatial confinement and reactive environment at the electrode–electrolyte interface effectively direct the multi-step conversion and suppress overoxidation, underscoring the vital role of interface engineering in modulating the C–N coupling efficiency.
As a typical example of dual-site catalysis, Xian et al. constructed a CoFe alloy-decorated self-standing carbon fiber membrane (CoFe-SSM), which promoted the electrosynthesis of α-amino acids from NO and α-keto acids via a dual-site synergy strategy.112 In this system, the CoFe alloy provides two distinct but synergistic metal centers, where the Co sites facilitated the reduction of NO to hydroxylamine (NH2OH), while the Fe sites assisted in the transformation of the oxime intermediates into α-keto acids via hydrogenation. This dual-site synergy strategy led to improved C–N coupling selectivity and FE compared to single-site catalyst systems (Fig. 6a).
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Fig. 6 (a) Comparative leucine production yields of the CoFe-SSM catalyst and control samples under varying reaction conditions.112 Reproduced with permission from ref. 112, Copyright © 2023, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (b) In situ ATR-FTIR spectra of the electrosynthesis of glycine on Cu/Bi-C@CF.97 Reproduced with permission from ref. 97, Copyright © 2024, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (c) Mechanism of the nitrate and glyoxylate C–N coupling reaction.79 Reproduced with permission from ref. 79, Copyright © 2023, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (d) Comparison of free energies for side-on versus end-on N2 adsorption on diatomic catalysts.113 (e) Energy barrier of C–N coupling on ZnMn-N, Cl.113 Reproduced with permission from ref. 113, Copyright © 2023, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (f) Comparative analysis on Ni-SAC, Fe-SAC, I-FeNi-DASC, and B-FeNi-DASC catalysts at −1.4 V vs. RHE.114 (g) Pathway for the first C–N coupling forming *NHCO intermediate.114 (h) Pathway for the second C–N coupling forming *NHCONO intermediate.114 Reproduced with permission from, ref. 114 Copyright © 2022, Springer Nature. (i) Reaction pathway of Pd1Cu1/TiO2-400.57 Reproduced with permission from ref. 57, Copyright © 2020, Springer Nature. |
Liao et al. developed a Cu–Bi bimetallic catalyst derived from MOF arrays grown on copper foam (Cu/Bi-C@CF), which enabled the high-efficiency electrosynthesis of glycine from nitrate and glyoxylate under ambient conditions.97 Cu and Bi act as two functionally distinct but spatially adjacent active sites, where Cu reduces nitrate to hydroxylamine (NH2OH), while Bi modulates the local electronic environment of Cu, weakening *NO adsorption and enhancing NH2OH desorption. XPS and XANES data show electron transfer from Bi to Cu, weakening excessive *NO adsorption and enhancing the NH2OH selectivity. In situ ATR-FTIR spectra (Fig. 6b) show the formation of CN-OH and CH2 groups, supporting oxime formation and subsequent hydrogenation. Compared with monometallic Cu or Bi catalysts, the Cu–Bi system demonstrates significantly improved FE and product selectivity, confirming the importance of dual-site synergy in directing the C–N coupling pathway.
Wu and co-workers developed a PdCu nano-bead-wire (Pd1Cu1 NBWs) catalyst that exhibits a dual-site synergy in catalyzing the tandem coupling of biomass-derived pyruvic acid (PA) and nitrate (NO3−) into alanine.79 The reaction proceeds through a three-step electrochemical-chemical-electrochemical cascade mechanism. Initially, the Cu sites catalyze the reduction of nitrate to hydroxylamine (NH2OH), serving as the nitrogen donor. Subsequently, NH2OH spontaneously condenses with PA to form a pyruvic oxime intermediate. Finally, the Pd sites drive the electrochemical hydrogenation of the oxime to produce alanine as the main product (Fig. 6c). By spatially separating the activation of nitrate and the reduction of the CN intermediate, this dual-site system enables precise control over individual reaction steps. As a result, a high alanine yield of 54.8% is achieved under ambient conditions, significantly suppressing the formation of side products such as lactic acid.
Zhang et al. achieved 63.5% FE urea electrosynthesis via Zn–Mn dual-site synergy with axial Cl coordination (ZnMn-N, Cl).113 By leveraging the complementary electronic characteristics of Zn and Mn, the catalyst forms local electrophilic and nucleophilic centers that enable the co-adsorption and co-activation of CO2 and N2 molecules. This spatial and electronic cooperation facilitates a one-step C–N coupling pathway, bypassing the formation of ammonia intermediates, and achieving a nearly 100% N-selectivity and a maximum FE of 63.5% under CO pre-poisoning. The N2 molecule adopts a side-on adsorption mode on the Zn–Mn pair, which is thermodynamically more favorable than the conventional end-on configuration. The subsequent coupling with *CO species derived from CO2 reduction directly forms an *NCON* intermediate (Fig. 6d and e).
Zhang et al. developed a bonded Fe–Ni diatomic electrocatalyst (B-FeNi-DASC) to achieve synergistic urea synthesis (Fig. 6f).114 By integrating Fe and Ni atoms into a well-defined diatomic configuration, this catalyst achieves the concurrent adsorption and activation of nitrate and CO2, offering spatial proximity and electronic complementarity between the two active centers. Compared to single-atom and non-bonded diatomic systems, the bonded Fe–Ni sites not only generate abundant *NO and *CO intermediates but also directly participate in the C–N bond formation steps (Fig. 6g and h).
Chen and co-workers developed a dual-site synergy strategy by anchoring PdCu alloy nanoparticles onto oxygen-vacancy-rich TiO2 nanosheets (Pd1Cu1/TiO2-400), enabling the electrocatalytic coupling of N2 and CO2 to produce urea under ambient conditions.57 In this catalyst system, Pd enhances back-donation to weaken the NN bond of N2, while Cu facilitates CO2 activation and *CO intermediate stabilization. On the PdCu alloy surface, the activated *N
N* species couples with CO to form the key intermediate *NCON*, which proceeds through a kinetically favorable (Ea = 0.79 eV) and thermodynamically downhill (ΔG = −0.89 eV) pathway (Fig. 6i).
Wei et al. developed a dynamic reconstruction strategy by designing Cu1 single atoms supported on CeO2 (Cu1-CeO2), which undergo reversible structural transformation into Cu4 clusters under electrocatalytic conditions.94 This dynamic evolution bridges single-atom precision with cluster-level activity, enabling a self-adjusting catalytic configuration that adapts to the electrochemical environment. The reconstituted Cu4 clusters act as real active sites (Fig. 7a), significantly enhancing the simultaneous adsorption and activation of NO3− and CO2. DFT calculations reveal that the C–N coupling proceeds via the Eley–Rideal mechanism, where *NO and *CO form the key intermediate *OCNO with a low energy barrier of 0.34 eV on Cu4-CeO2, which is significantly lower than the 0.93 eV required on pristine CeO2 (Fig. 7b and c). Subsequent coupling with a second *NO yields *ONCONO, which undergoes eight electron–proton-transfer steps to produce urea.
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Fig. 7 (a) Free energy changes of urea production on Pd1Cu1/TiO2-400.94 (b) Kinetic barriers of *OCNO and *ONCONO on CeO2 vs. Cu4-CeO2.94 (c) Free-energy profiles and optimized geometry of C–N coupling on Cu4-CeO2.94 Reproduced with permission from ref. 94, Copyright © 2023, Wiley-VCH GmbH. (d) EPR spectrum of Cu(II)-NH3.98 (e) Catalytic mechanism.98 Reproduced with permission from ref. 98, Copyright © 2023, Springer Nature. |
He et al. demonstrated that pulse-engineered spatiotemporal control fundamentally transforms electrocatalytic arylamine synthesis by dynamically orchestrating three synchronized processes,98 as follows: (1) during cathodic pulses (−1.1 V), low-coordinated Cu nanocorals leverage undercoordinated sites (CN = 9.75) to reduce NO2− to NH3 with 95% FE, accumulating critical nitrogen feedstock. (2) Switching to anodic pulses (+0.4 V) oxidizes the Cu electrode to solubilize catalytic Cu(II), which coordinates with NH3 to form the key Cu(II)-NH3 intermediate (Fig. 7d), while simultaneously driving the electrophoretic migration of the nucleophilic ArB(OH)3− toward the anode and consuming OH− ions via Cu oxidation (2Cu + 2OH− → Cu2O + H2O), thereby suppressing phenol byproducts from 28% to <5% (Fig. 7e). (3) The rapid polarity alternation maintains high local concentrations of Cu(II)/NH3 near the electrode surface, accelerating C–N bond formation to achieve 72% arylamine yield (an 8-fold enhancement over static potential methods). This temporal strategy further enables the self-regeneration of the catalytic Cu species through cathodic electrodeposition and can be expanded to 15N-labeled arylamine synthesis (98.99% isotopic purity) and click reactions, establishing pulsed electrochemistry as a paradigm-shifting approach for complex organic electrosynthesis beyond static catalyst design.
Regulation strategy | Catalyst | Production | Electrolyte | Condition | Selectivity | Conversion | FE | Yield | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Defect engineering | AD-Fe/NC | Amino acids | 0.1 M HCl + 20![]() |
−0.6 V vs. RHE | 11.3% | 47.4% | 9.5% | 32.1 μmol mgcat−1 | 60 |
Defect engineering | Pd/Cu-VCu | DMF | 0.5 M KHCO3 | 20 mA cm−2 | — | — | 37.5% | 385 mmol h−1 gcat−1 | 99 |
Defect engineering | e-OD-Cu | HMTA | 0.1 M KOH + 0.5 M K2SO4 | −0.3 V vs. RHE | 99% | — | 74.9% | 76.8% | 100 |
Defect engineering | Cu/PI-X | Urea | 0.1 M KHCO3 + 0.1 M KNO3 | −1.4 V vs. RHE | — | — | 14.3% | 255.0![]() |
101 |
Defect engineering | VO-CeO2-750 | Urea | 0.1 M KHCO3 + 50 mM KNO3 | −1.6 V vs. RHE | — | — | — | 943.6 mg h−1 g−1 | 102 |
Defect engineering | ReMn-NC | Urea | PBS | −0.3 V vs. RHE | 89.1% | — | — | 48.9 ± 2.4 mg g−1 h−1 | 103 |
Defect engineering | Cu97In3-C | Urea | 0.1 M KHCO3 | −1.5 V vs. RHE | — | — | — | 13.1![]() |
62 |
Defect engineering | NS-CNS | Alanine | 1.0 M KOH | −0.5 V vs. RHE | >99.9% | >75% | 79.5% | 1199 μmol h−1 cm−2 | 104 |
Coordination environment design | ZIF-7/CGF | 1-PDO | 0.1 M KOH | −0.1 V vs. RHE | — | — | 75.9% | 73.1% | 43 |
Coordination environment design | Cu–S | Cyclohexanone oxime | 0.5 M PBS + 0.2 mM CYC + 2 mM NaNO2 | −0.9 V vs. Ag/AgCl | 99% | — | 26% | 92% | 42 |
Coordination environment design | HEA-PdCuAgBilnene | Cyclohexanone oxime | 0.5 M PBS + 0.02 M CYC + 0.1 M KNO2 | −0.9 V vs. Ag/AgCl | — | — | 47.6% | ∼100% | 95 |
Coordination environment design | NH2-MIL-53(Al) | 2-Pyridinealdoxime | 0.1 M KOH | 13 mA | — | — | 49.8% | 92.1% | 105 |
Coordination environment Design | MgO-SCM | 4-CBOE | 0.001 M KOH/0.05 M Li2SO4 | 12 mA | 93% | — | 65.1% | 94% | 106 |
coordination environment design | adFe-TiOx/Ti | Glycine | 0.5 M H2SO4 + 0.1 M GA + 1.0 M NaNO3 | −0.7 V vs. RHE | 80.2% | 100% | 80.5% | 83.4% | 107 |
Coordination environment design | OD-Ag | Alanine | 0.5 M PBS | −0.56 V vs. RHE | — | — | 17.0% | 11.45 mmol h−1 g−1 | 47 |
Coordination environment design | CuPc-amino | Urea | 0.1 M KHCO3 + 0.05 M KNO3 | -1.6 V vs. RHE | — | — | 11.9 ± 0.6% | 103.1 ± 5.3 mmol h−1 g−1 | 108 |
Interface engineering | Ag-50 | Cyclohexanone oxime | 0.5 M Na2CO3 + 0.5 M NaNO2 | 100 mA cm−2 | — | 99.6% | 83.8% | 0.78 mmol![]() |
44 |
Interface engineering | Fe | Cyclohexanone oxime | 0.5 M K2CO3 + 1 M KNO3 | 500 mA cm−2 | 100% | 100% | ∼100% | 59.5 g h−1 gcat−1 | 78 |
Interface engineering | Cu | Cyclohexanone oxime | 0.5 M KHCO3 + 20 mM phenol + 10 mM (NH3OH)2SO4 | −0.9 V vs. RHE | 94% | 97.5% | 69.1% | 90% | 61 |
Interface engineering | Fe-based | Benzaldoxime | 0.5 M H2SO4 + 0.5 M K2CO3 | 200 mA cm−2 | — | 1.52% | 99% | 59 | |
Interface engineering | CuxCyOz@600 | CP-O | 0.5 M KNO3 + 0.1 M CP | −1.6 V vs. Ag/AgCl | 96.2% | 99% | 47.8% | 34.9 mg h−1 cm−2 | 29 |
Interface engineering | BDD | Formamide | 0.5 M NaHCO3 | 120 mA cm−2 | 73.2% | — | 41.2% | 461.39![]() |
110 |
Interface engineering | Pt | Formamide | 0.5 M NaHCO3/0.25 M H2SO4 | 100 mA cm−2 | 74.26% | — | 40.39% | 305.4 μmol cm−2 h−1 | 111 |
Dual-site synergy | CoFe-SSM | α-Amino acids | 0.1 M HCl | −0.7 V vs. RHE | 56.7% | 98.5% | 32.4% | 115.4![]() |
112 |
Dual-site synergy | Cu/Bi−C@CF | Glycine | 0.1 M HCl | 75 mA | 89% | >99% | 65.9% | 89% | 97 |
Dual-site synergy | Pd1Cu1 NBWs | Alanine | 1.0 M KNO3 + 50 mM PA | −0.3 V vs. RHE | — | — | — | 54.8% | 79 |
Dual-site synergy | ZnMn-N | Urea | KHCO3 | −0.3 V vs. RHE | 100% | — | 63.5% | 4.0![]() |
113 |
Dual-site synergy | B-FeNi-DASC | Urea | 0.1 M KHCO3 + 50 mM KNO3/KNO2 | −1.5 V vs. RHE | — | — | 17.8% | 20.2 mmol h−1 g−1 | 114 |
Dual-site synergy | Pd1Cu1/TiO2-400 | Urea | 0.1 M KHCO3 | −0.4 V vs. RHE | — | — | 8.92% | 3.36 mmol g−1 h−1 | 57 |
Emerging architectures | Cu1-CeO2 | Urea | 0.1 M KHCO3 + 50 mM KNO3 | −1.6 V vs. RHE | — | — | — | 52.84 mmol h−1 gcat.−1 | 94 |
Emerging architectures | LC-Cu NC | Arylamines | 0.25 M PBS + MeOH | Eca = −1.1 V, Ean = 0.4 V | — | — | 95% | 72% | 98 |
Focusing on the underlying catalytic mechanisms and structural-function correlations, we classified the catalyst engineering strategies into five representative categories including defect engineering, coordination environment design, interface engineering, dual-site synergy, and emerging architectures. These approaches address key challenges such as poor intermediate stability, weak substrate adsorption compatibility, and low selectivity.
Despite the substantial progress enabled by the five major catalyst design strategies, several fundamental challenges remain unresolved. For instance, the underlying reaction kinetics and the behavior of the transient intermediates under the dynamic electrochemical environment are still not clearly understood, making it difficult to rationally modulate activity and selectivity. Competing reactions such as hydrogen evolution, over-reduction and other undesired side reactions often interfere with the desired coupling steps. To further push the frontiers of NOx-involved C–N electrosynthesis, we propose four strategic development directions (Fig. 8).
In summary, electrocatalytic NOx-involved C–N coupling represents a promising frontier in green chemical synthesis. Through advances in dynamic catalyst design, microenvironment control, AI-assisted optimization, and scalable system engineering, the field is poised to overcome current limitations and move toward high-efficiency, selective, and industrially viable electrosynthesis platforms. Future progress will rely on the integration of scalable catalyst design with modular reactor engineering, as well as cross-disciplinary collaboration spanning materials science, artificial intelligence, and process systems. Addressing these bottlenecks will be essential for translating NOx-involved electrosynthesis from conceptual frameworks into practical, sustainable applications.
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