Synergistic catalysis over Ni/ZrOx for hydrogen production from hydrolysis of ammonia borane†
Abstract
Ammonia borane (AB) is broadly researched as a hydrogen storage medium because of its safe storage and high hydrogen density. However, the development of efficient catalytic systems on non-precious metal catalysts is still a big challenge. Herein, ZrO2 was selectively used to immobilize Ni nanoparticles, followed by a subsequent reduction at different temperatures to obtain Ni/ZrOx-T catalysts (T denotes reduction temperature, T = 300–600 °C). The Ni/ZrOx-500 catalyst displays a tremendous enhancement of the reaction rate to 114.41 molH2 molNi−1 min−1 and the turnover frequency (TOF) to 196.82 min−1. HR-TEM and XPS characterization techniques verify that the strength of metal–support interaction (MSI) enhances firstly and then decreases as the reduction temperature elevates from 300 to 600 °C, which leads to the formation of an interfacial structure (Ni2+–Ov–Zr3+) induced by electron transfer from Ni to the ZrOx support. Kinetic isotope effect studies combined with in situ FT-IR measurements confirm that Ni2+–Ov–Zr3+ serves as an active structure for AB hydrolysis, in which Ov–Zr3+ directly participates in the rate-determining step (water dissociation) while Ni2+ accelerates the B–H bond cleavage. This work provides a useful paradigm for the rational design and preparation of cost-effective catalysts for AB hydrolysis with a high H2 production.