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Visible-Light-Driven Nitrogen Fixation Catalyzed by BiOBr Nanostructures: Enhanced Performance by Oxygen Vacancies. | LitMetric

Visible-Light-Driven Nitrogen Fixation Catalyzed by BiOBr Nanostructures: Enhanced Performance by Oxygen Vacancies.

J Am Chem Soc

Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences at the Microscale, Collaborative Innovation Center of Chemistry for Energy Materials (iChEM), School of Chemistry and Materials Science, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui 230026, P. R. China.

Published: July 2020

Photocatalytic nitrogen fixation represents a green alternative to the conventional Haber-Bosch process in the conversion of nitrogen to ammonia. In this study, a series of BiOBr nanostructures were synthesized via a facile, low-temperature thermal treatment procedure, and their photocatalytic activity toward nitrogen fixation was evaluated and compared. Spectroscopic measurements showed that the tubular BiOBr sample prepared at 40 °C (BiOBr-40) exhibited the highest electron-transfer rate among the series, producing a large number of O radicals and oxygen vacancies under visible-light photoirradiation and reaching a rate of photocatalytic nitrogen fixation of 12.72 mM·g·h after 30 min of photoirradiation. The reaction dynamics was also monitored by in situ infrared measurements with a synchrotron radiation light source, where the transient difference between signals in the dark and under photoirradiation was analyzed and the reaction pathway of nitrogen fixation was identified. This was further supported by results from density functional theory calculations. The reaction energy of nitrogen fixation was quantitatively estimated and compared by building oxygen-enriched and anoxic models, where the change in the oxygen vacancy concentration was found to play a critical role in determining the nitrogen fixation performance. Results from this study suggest that BiOBr with rich oxygen vacancies can be used as a high-performance photocatalyst for nitrogen fixation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c05097DOI Listing

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