The air–water interfacial nitrogen cycle produces irrigatable-level ammonium nitrate
Abstract
We report a sustainable, air-based strategy for synthesizing ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3) by harnessing the redox-active properties of microscale air–water interfaces. The process proceeds through two sequential reactions: (1) the nitrogen oxidation reaction (NOR), generating nitrate (NO3−) from atmospheric N2, and (2) the nitrate reduction reaction (NO3RR), converting nitrate into ammonium ions (NH4+). In the first step, ambient air is introduced into a recirculating microbubble system, where solar irradiation and a water-soluble photocatalyst drive the efficient oxidation of N2 to nitrate, producing NO3− at a rate of 500 μmol L−1 h−1. In the second step, atomized water microdroplets are sprayed across a Fe3O4–Nafion–CuO mesh, generating an extensive air–water interfacial area that promotes the reduction of nitrate and nitric oxide intermediates to NH4+. Over 12 hours, this tandem process yields a 50 mL aqueous solution containing 0.94 mM NH4NO3 and 4.42 mM HNO3, derived entirely from air and water. This carbon-free and catalyst-assisted platform offers a decentralized and environmentally friendly approach to nitrogen fixation, with immediate applications in hydroponic systems, where controlled nutrient delivery is essential. The integration of solar photocatalysis with microdroplet interfacial chemistry establishes a viable foundation for next-generation green fertilizer technologies.
- This article is part of the themed collection: 2025 Chemical Science HOT Article Collection