Abstract

With respect to massive consumption of ammonia and rigorous industrial synthesis conditions, many studies have been devoted to investigating more environmentally benign catalysts for ammonia synthesis under moderate conditions. However, traditional methods for analysis of synthesized ammonia (e.g., off-line ion chromatography (IC) and chemical titration) suffer from poor sensitivity, low time resolution, and sample manipulations. In this work, charge-transfer ionization (CTI) with O2(+) as the reagent ion based on a vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) lamp in a time-of-flight mass spectrometer (CTI-TOFMS) has been applied for real-time monitoring of the ammonia synthesis in a microreactor. For the necessity of long-term stable monitoring, a self-adjustment algorithm for stabilizing O2(+) ion intensity was developed to automatically compensate the attenuation of the O2(+) ion yield in the ion source as a result of the oxidation of the photoelectric electrode and contamination on the MgF2 window of the VUV lamp. A wide linear calibration curve in the concentration range of 0.2-1000 ppmv with a correlation coefficient (R(2)) of 0.9986 was achieved, and the limit of quantification (LOQ) for NH3 was in ppbv. Microcatalytic synthesis of ammonia with three catalysts prepared by transition-metal/carbon nanotubes was tested, and the rapid changes of NH3 conversion rates with the reaction temperatures were quantitatively measured with a time resolution of 30 s. The high-time-resolution CTI-TOFMS could not only achieve the equilibrium conversion rates of NH3 rapidly but also monitor the activity variations with respect to investigated catalysts during ammonia synthesis reactions.

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