Abstract
We report the synthesis and electrocatalytic performance of dynamic hydrogen bubble
templated (DHBT) iron foams for the selective reduction of nitrate to ammonia, a novel strategy
to mitigate nitrate pollution and add a decentralized route for ammonia production. The
proposed catalyst Fe-foam_90s@Ti achieves up to 97% faradic efficiency (FENH3
) and partial
ammonia current density (jNH3
) approaching -1 A.cm-2 under no external convection,
outperforming all previously reported DHBT foams. Operando Raman spectroscopy and IL
SEM studies reveal that the active state of metallic Fe is responsible for the high selectivity and
increased current densities, while providing mechanistic insights into catalyst corrosion.
Potential-dependent ICP-MS and ion chromatography studies identified the potential regimes
of minimal Fe corrosion, which helped to demonstrate a suitable operating regime under
extended electrolysis stress tests. In addition, the scalability of the catalyst was demonstrated
by implementing it in an industrial model flow cell electrolyzer operating under galvanostatic
conditions. The iron foams proposed in this study are highly effective catalysts for
electrochemical nitrate reduction, offering a rare combination of low cost, scalability, and
minimal environmental footprint. These results reinforce the potential of iron foam as an ideal
electrocatalyst candidate for scaling up nitrate reduction, a compelling starter strategy for
sustainable nitrogen management.
Supplementary materials
Title
Electrochemically Stabilized Iron Foam Enables Selective and Durable Nitrate-to-Ammonia Conversion at Industrial Current Densities Supplementary Information
Description
This file contains additional experiments referenced in the main text but not presented therein due to size constraints. These include comprehensive SEM-EDX studies, catalyst optimization, and extended datasets on electrochemical performance analysis. Details of experimental setups (H-type cells, electrolyzers, and operando cells), methodologies (UV-visible spectroscopy, IC, CV, EIS, etc.), and relevant raw data (long-term, short-term chronoamperometry, etc.) are provided as well in this supplementary information file.
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