Electrochemical N reduction reaction (NRR) emerges as a highly attractive alternative to the Haber-Bosch process for producing ammonia (NH) under ambient circumstances. Currently, this technology still faces tremendous challenges due to the low ammonia production rate and low Faradaic efficiency, urgently prompting researchers to explore highly efficient electrocatalysts. Inspired by the Fe-Mo cofactor in nitrogenase, we report Mo-doped hematite (FeO) porous nanospheres containing Fe-O-Mo subunits for enhanced activity and selectivity in the electrochemical reduction from N to NH. Mo-doping induces the morphology change from a solid sphere to a porous sphere and enriches lattice defects, creating more active sites. It also regulates the electronic structures of FeO to accelerate charge transfer and enhance the intrinsic activity. As a consequence, Mo-doped FeO achieves effective N fixation with a high ammonia production rate of 21.3 ± 1.1 μg h mg as well as a prominent Faradaic efficiency (FE) of 11.2 ± 0.6%, superior to the undoped FeO and other iron oxide catalysts. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations further unravel that the Mo-doping in FeO (110) narrows the band gap, promotes the N activation on the Mo site with an elongated N≡N bond length of 1.132 Å in the end-on configuration, and optimizes an associative distal pathway with a decreased energy barrier. Our results may pave the way toward enhancing the electrocatalytic NRR performance of iron-based materials by atomic-scale heteroatom doping.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c16081 | DOI Listing |
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces
December 2022
State Key Laboratory of Fine Chemicals, School of Chemical Engineering, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian 116024, China.
Chemosphere
August 2021
Centre for Water Research, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, National University of Singapore, 1 Engineering Drive 2, Singapore, 117576, Singapore. Electronic address:
Three different visible-light photocatalysts (hematite (α-FeO), bismuth vanadate (BiVO) and Mo-doped bismuth vanadate (BiMoVO)) deposited on transparent fluorine-doped SnO (FTO) were evaluated for the solar-driven photoelectrocatalytic treatment of emerging pollutants. BiMoVO was found to be the most effective photoanode, yielding the fastest degradation rate constant and highest mineralization efficiency using phenol as the oxidation probe. The BiMoVO photoanode was then used to degrade the herbicide simazine in a photoelectrolytic cell combining photoelectrocatalysis (PEC) with photoelectron-Fenton (PEF) under solar light (SPEC-SPEC).
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March 2015
Joint Center for Artificial Photosynthesis, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720 (United States); Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720 (United States).
We report a scalable and reproducible method for reactive co-sputtering of Mo-doped BiVO4 thin films with broad compositional control. Optimal photoanode performance is achieved at a Mo concentration of 3 at. %.
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