AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers are exploring new methods for dinitrogen fixation, shifting focus from transition metals to main group elements like barium hydride (BaH) for ammonia synthesis.
  • The study shows that hydrogen vacancies in BaH create active sites for nitrogen activation, leading to the conversion of nitrogen (N) into ammonia (NH) efficiently.
  • This innovative BaH-mediated process outperforms traditional catalytic methods, indicating its potential for future ammonia production without using transition metals.

Article Abstract

Transition-metal-mediated dinitrogen fixation has been intensively investigated. The employment of main group elements for this vital reaction has recently sparked interest because of new dinitrogen reaction chemistry. We report ammonia synthesis via a chemical looping process mediated by a transition-metal-free barium hydride (BaH ). Experimental and computational studies reveal that the introduction of hydrogen vacancies is essential for creating multiple coordinatively unsaturated Ba sites for N activation. The adjacent lattice hydridic hydrogen (H ) then undergoes both reductive elimination and reductive protonation to convert N to NH . The ammonia production rate supports this hydride-vacancy mechanism via a chemical looping route that far exceeds that of a catalytic process. The BaH -mediated chemical looping process has prospects in future technologies for ammonia synthesis using transition-metal-free materials.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.202205805DOI Listing

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