Regulation of Active Hydrogen and Nitrate Concentration: Pulsed Potential Strategies in Nitrate Electroreduction Microenvironments
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
The electrochemical reduction of nitrate (NO 3 RR) plays a significant role in the nitrogen cycle and environmental remediation. The dynamics of active hydrogen in the NO 3 RR were studied in depth by varying the nitrate concentration and applying a pulsed-potential approach. The effect of both factors on regulation of the degree of hydrogenation of the intermediates and the product distribution was evaluated. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations indicated that elevated nitrate levels decrease the energy barrier for *NO to *N conversion, enhancing *N 2 formation. The experimental results indicate that under high nitrate concentrations, copper-palladium (CuPd) catalysts exhibit faster reaction kinetics and higher nitrogen selectivity. In-situ characterizations illuminated the critical role of active hydrogen on reaction intermediates. The CuPd catalyst achieved 95% NO 3 -N conversion and 99% N 2 selectivity at 1 M nitrate by pulse potential modulation of the active hydrogen concentration on the catalyst surface. Finite element analysis (FEA) verified that pulsed potentials modulate the local nitrate and hydrogen ion concentrations. The present work brings the NO 3 RR closer to practical applications, aiding in environmental protection and the balance of the nitrogen cycle.