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A Copper-Zinc Cyanamide Solid-Solution Catalyst with Tailored Surface Electrostatic Potentials Promotes Asymmetric N-Intermediate Adsorption in Nitrite Electroreduction

  • Jiacheng Jayden Wang
  • , Huong T.D. Bui
  • , Xunlu Wang
  • , Zhuoran Lv
  • , Huashuai Hu
  • , Shuyi Kong
  • , Zhiqiang Wang
  • , Lijia Liu
  • , Wei Chen
  • , Hui Bi
  • , Minghui Yang
  • , Tore Brinck
  • , Jiacheng Wang
  • , Fuqiang Huang
  • CAS - Shanghai Institute of Ceramics
  • University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • KTH Royal Institute of Technology
  • Dalian University of Technology
  • Shanghai Jiao Tong University
  • Western University
  • TaiZhou University
  • Nankai University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

36 Scopus citations

Abstract

The electrocatalytic nitrite reduction (NO2RR) converts nitrogen-containing pollutants to high-value ammonia (NH3) under ambient conditions. However, its multiple intermediates and multielectron coupled proton transfer process lead to low activity and NH3 selectivity for the existing electrocatalysts. Herein, we synthesize a solid-solution copper-zinc cyanamide (Cu0.8Zn0.2NCN) with localized structure distortion and tailored surface electrostatic potential, allowing for the asymmetric binding of NO2-. It exhibits outstanding NO2RR performance with a Faradaic efficiency of ∼100% and an NH3 yield of 22 mg h-1 cm-2, among the best for such a process. Theoretical calculations and in situ spectroscopic measurements demonstrate that Cu-Zn sites coordinated with linear polarized [NCN]2- could transform symmetric [Cu-O-N-O-Cu] in CuNCN-NO2- to a [Cu-N-O-Zn] asymmetric configuration in Cu0.8Zn0.2NCN-NO2-, thus enhancing adsorption and bond cleavage. A paired electro-refinery with the Cu0.8Zn0.2NCN cathode reaches 2000 mA cm-2 at 2.36 V and remains fully operational at industrial-level 400 mA cm-2 for >140 h with a NH3 production rate of ∼30 mgNH3 h-1 cm-2. Our work opens a new avenue of tailoring surface electrostatic potentials using a solid-solution strategy for advanced electrocatalysis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)8012-8023
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume147
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 5 2025

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