Published May 2020 | Version Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Non-aqueous gas diffusion electrodes for rapid ammonia synthesis from nitrogen and water-splitting-derived hydrogen

Abstract

Electrochemical transformations in non-aqueous solvents are important for synthetic and energy storage applications. Use of non-polar gaseous reactants such as nitrogen and hydrogen in non-aqueous solvents is limited by their low solubility and slow transport. Conventional gas diffusion electrodes improve the transport of gaseous species in aqueous electrolytes by facilitating efficient gas–liquid contacting in the vicinity of the electrode. Their use with non-aqueous solvents is hampered by the absence of hydrophobic repulsion between the liquid phase and carbon fibre support. Herein we report a method to overcome transport limitations in tetrahydrofuran using a stainless steel cloth-based support for ammonia synthesis paired with hydrogen oxidation. An ammonia partial current density of 8.8 ± 1.4 mA cm⁻² and a Faradaic efficiency of 35 ± 6% are obtained using a lithium-mediated approach. Hydrogen oxidation current densities of up to 25 mA cm⁻² are obtained in two non-aqueous solvents with near-unity Faradaic efficiency. The approach is then applied to produce ammonia from nitrogen and water-splitting-derived hydrogen.

Additional Information

© 2020 Springer Nature Limited. Received 23 December 2019. Accepted 19 March 2020. Published 04 May 2020. This material is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation under grant no. 1944007 and the MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI) seed fund. N.L. acknowledges support by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under grant no. 1122374. We thank M. Wolski of Daramic for providing us with polyporous separator samples. Data availability. The data that support the plots in this paper and other findings of this study are available from the corresponding author on request. Contributions. N.L. and K.M conceptualized the paper. N.L. was responsible for the methodology. N.L. and M.L.G. carried out the investigation. M.C. performed the validation. N.L. wrote the original draft of the manscript and K.W., N.L., M.C. and K.M. reviewed and edited its contents. K.M. supervised the work. The authors declare no competing interests.

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
114615
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20220505-565237000

Funding

NSF
CBET-1944007
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
DGE-1122374

Dates

Created
2022-05-09
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2022-05-09
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