Developing highly effective catalysts for ammonia (NH) synthesis is a challenging task. Even the current, prevalent iron-derived catalysts used for industrial NH synthesis require harsh reaction conditions and involve massive energy consumption. Here we show that anchoring buckminsterfullerene (C) onto non-iron transition metals yields cluster-matrix co-catalysts that are highly efficient for NH synthesis. Such co-catalysts feature separate catalytic active sites for hydrogen and nitrogen. The 'electron buffer' behaviour of C balances the electron density at catalytic transition metal sites and enables the synergistic activation of nitrogen on transition metals in addition to the activation and migration of hydrogen on C sites. As demonstrated in long-term, continuous runs, the C-promoting transition metal co-catalysts exhibit higher NH synthesis rates than catalysts without C. With the involvement of C, the rate-determining step in the cluster-matrix co-catalysis is found to be the hydrogenation of *NH. C incorporation exemplifies a practical approach for solving hydrogen poisoning on a wide variety of oxide-supported Ru catalysts.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41557-024-01626-6 | DOI Listing |
Nat Chem
November 2024
State Key Laboratory of Physical Chemistry of Solid Surfaces, College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Xiamen University, Xiamen, P. R. China.
Developing highly effective catalysts for ammonia (NH) synthesis is a challenging task. Even the current, prevalent iron-derived catalysts used for industrial NH synthesis require harsh reaction conditions and involve massive energy consumption. Here we show that anchoring buckminsterfullerene (C) onto non-iron transition metals yields cluster-matrix co-catalysts that are highly efficient for NH synthesis.
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