Abstract
The electrochemical nitrate reduction reaction (NO3RR) offers a pathway to produce NH3 for fuel and fertilizer from waste NO3-. In this work, a polycrystalline vanadium sulfide (VSx), which is derived from solvothermally grown and annealed VS2, is shown to exhibit excellent NO3RR activity (2.3 +- 0.6 mg.cm-2 geo..h-1 @ -0.92 VRHE) and Faradaic efficiency to NH4+ (69 +- 6% at -0.69 VRHE) in buffered neutral pH electrolyte containing 0.1 M NO3-. A variety of characterization techniques are leveraged to support the VSx assignment, including X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy, selected area electron diffraction, and X-ray diffraction measurements. The VS2 annealing step reduces the oxide character and generates VSx, which, based on the improved NO3RR activity, results in the creation of active sites for NO3- binding. To help shed light on NO3RR on VSx, VS2 is used as a model system, and a grand-canonical density functional theory (GC-DFT) investigation of VS2 shows strong evidence that S vacancies are active sites for NO3RR, where NO3- outcompetes H+ for adsorption at the S-vacancy sites. Moreover, GC-DFT results highlight a thermodynamically favorable reaction to generate NH4+ in an aqueous electrolyte at relevant cathodic potentials. As an annealed material, VSx may contain undersaturated V sites, which show an electronic structure similar to the theoretically calculated S-vacancy site of VS2, and these sites may contribute to the observed increase in NO3RR activity and selectivity for NH4+ on VSx versus unannealed VS2. Finally, kinetic isotope effect measurements suggest that the kinetic rate-limiting step of the NO3RR on VSx is not proton-coupled, indicating it may be the first electron transfer to adsorbed NO3*.
| Original language | American English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 9407-9418 |
| Number of pages | 12 |
| Journal | ACS Applied Energy Materials |
| Volume | 8 |
| Issue number | 13 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 2025 |
NLR Publication Number
- NREL/JA-5900-92697
Keywords
- ammonia
- grand canonical density functional theory
- kinetic isotope effect
- nitrate reduction
- solvothermal growth
- vanadium disulfide
- vanadium sulfide