Refining active sites and hydrogen spillover for boosting visible-light-driven ammonia synthesis at room temperature†
Abstract
It is highly desirable to develop a low-pressure, low-temperature ammonia synthesis process. Although this process is, in principle, thermodynamically feasible under ambient conditions, it remains a big challenge to find ideal catalysts with favorable kinetic pathways. Here, we demonstrate that efficient ammonia synthesis (>3700 μg h−1 gcat.−1) from N2 and H2 gases can proceed at room temperature using Mo, Pt modified TiO2−x under visible light irradiation up to 800 nm. The doped Mo(V) species nearby surface oxygen vacancies (VO) offer coordinatively unsaturated sites for N2 activation with strong adsorption energy and excellent electron back-donation ability. Distinctively, a small amount of surface-loaded Pt nanoparticles trigger hydrogen spillover from Pt to VO, enabling facile NH3 assembly and desorption, as well as increasing free Mo(V) active sites. The incorporation of Mo and Pt also synergistically optimizes the light-harvesting ability and the band structure of TiO2, greatly facilitating the photoexcited N2 reduction and H2 oxidation.