Understanding the role of water in Li-mediated N2 reduction using in situ IR spectroscopy

03 April 2025, Version 1

Abstract

Understanding the fundamental processes that govern formation of the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) layer in lithium mediated nitrogen reduction may be crucial to the design of improved electrolyte formulations. In this work, the roles of water and ethanol on the formation of the SEI are studied using in situ infrared spectroscopy and postmortem cross-sectional microscopy. Our results connect the observed SEI morphologies to specific observed SEI formation mechanisms. We directly detect formation of lithium ethoxide (LiEtO) as a major SEI component at potentials positive of Li plating when ethanol is used as the proton donor, which further reacts to form LiOH and Li2O depending on water availability, and regenerates ethanol. We show that in water-containing electrolytes, the SEI consists of a highly porous outer layer, which we propose is largely LiOH, and a denser inner layer, consisting largely of Li2O. We show that the water concentration relative to the ethanol concentration in the electrolyte can strongly influences the porosity of the SEI and that the porosity of the Li2O-rich layer could favour the transport of N2 over the proton donor thus improving N2 reduction selectivity. Furthermore, our combined approach of directly probing SEI formation in real time and measuring morphological changes to the SEI can provide a framework for more informed SEI engineering to unlock further optimisation of the Li-mediated system.

Keywords

Ammonia
Lithium
Spectroscopy
Microscopy
N2

Supplementary materials

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Title
Understanding the role of water in Li-mediated N2 reduction using in situ IR spectroscopy – Supporting Information
Description
Contains details of electrode and electrochemical cell preparation, experimental details, XPS measurements, full in situ FTIR spectra, IR reference spectra, further discussion of reagent transport.
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