Affiliation:
1. Key Laboratory of Special Functional and Smart Polymer Materials of Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Northwestern Polytechnical University Youyi Road No. 127 Xi'an 710072 China
2. School of Chemical Engineering Xi'an Jiaotong University Xianning West Road No. 28 Xi'an 710048 China
Abstract
AbstractHydrogen spillover in metal‐supported catalysts can largely enhance electrocatalytic hydrogenation performance and reduce energy consumption. However, its fundamental mechanism, especially at the metal–metal interface, remains further explored, impeding relevant catalyst design. Here, we theoretically profile that a large free energy difference in hydrogen adsorption on two different metals (|ΔGH‐metal(i)−ΔGH‐metal(ii)|) induces a high kinetic barrier to hydrogen spillover between the metals. Minimizing the difference in their d‐band centers (Δϵd) should reduce |ΔGH‐metal(i)−ΔGH‐metal(ii)|, lowering the kinetic barrier to hydrogen spillover for improved electrocatalytic hydrogenation. We demonstrated this concept using copper‐supported ruthenium–platinum alloys with the smallest Δϵd, which delivered record high electrocatalytic nitrate hydrogenation performance, with ammonia production rate of 3.45±0.12 mmol h−1 cm−2 and Faraday efficiency of 99.8±0.2 %, at low energy consumption of 21.4 kWh kgamm−1. Using these catalysts, we further achieve continuous ammonia and formic acid production with a record high‐profit space.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities