Issue 18, 2022

Interfacial engineering of Cu–Fe2O3 nanotube arrays with built-in electric field and oxygen vacancies for boosting the electrocatalytic reduction of nitrates

Abstract

The key to enhancing electrocatalytic nitrate reduction to ammonium (ENRA) is to improve the slow mass transfer of nitrates and the effective electron transfer on the catalyst surface. Based on the thermal diffusion theory and electroreduction mechanism, a Cu–Fe2O3 nanotube electrocatalyst with enriched oxygen vacancies and a built-in electric field was designed by controlling the heating and electroreduction time. Because of its unique structure, it could induce the generation of a built-in electric field and promote the enrichment of nitrate ions and electron transfer on the catalyst surface. Combined with the oxygen vacancy (OV)-anchoring mechanism, Cu–Fe2O3-60 showed remarkable Faraday efficiency (80.1%) and selectivity (88.47%). In addition, even when the reactor was scaled up to a pilot capacity of 180 L, the conversion rate was close to 85%. This work demonstrates that controlling the staggered interface distribution and oxygen vacancy number in metal–semiconductor is an effective way to design high-efficiency electrocatalysts.

Graphical abstract: Interfacial engineering of Cu–Fe2O3 nanotube arrays with built-in electric field and oxygen vacancies for boosting the electrocatalytic reduction of nitrates

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Jun 2022
Accepted
19 Jul 2022
First published
21 Jul 2022
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Mater. Adv., 2022,3, 7107-7115

Interfacial engineering of Cu–Fe2O3 nanotube arrays with built-in electric field and oxygen vacancies for boosting the electrocatalytic reduction of nitrates

Y. Gao, K. Huang, C. Yan, S. Li, H. Zhang, L. Cheng and F. Huang, Mater. Adv., 2022, 3, 7107 DOI: 10.1039/D2MA00685E

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