Barium-doped iron nanoparticles supported on MgO as an efficient catalyst for ammonia synthesis under mild reaction conditions†
Abstract
To realize a carbon-neutral society, developing highly active and inexpensive catalysts for ammonia (NH3) production working under moderate conditions (<400 °C, <10 MPa) using hydrogen fabricated from the electrolysis of water is demanded. Current industrial fused iron (Fe) catalysts show deficient activity under such conditions. Although Ru-based catalysts have been introduced as highly efficient catalysts working under desired conditions, they are scarce and consequently expensive. This work introduces Fe/Ba/MgO (reduced at 700 °C) as an active catalyst with a high ammonia production rate working at mild temperature and pressure (350 °C, 1.0 MPa). Ba doping to Fe nanoparticles supported on MgO and pre-reduction at high temperatures dramatically ameliorated the NH3 production rate. Due to the absence of hydrogen poisoning, the catalytic activity of the Fe/Ba/MgO increased gradually by raising the pressure from 0.1 to 3.0 MPa. The activity of this catalyst at 3.0 MPa was higher than that of two benchmark Ru catalysts. After pre-reduction at high temperature, electrons are donated from the BaO encapsulating the Fe0 nanoparticles to the N2 molecule, which promotes the rate-determining step of ammonia synthesis. We anticipate that these findings will contribute to developing inexpensive Fe catalysts for decarbonizing the ammonia synthesis process to achieve a carbon-neutral society.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Recent Open Access Articles