Abstract

As renewable energy sources are either intermittent in nature or remote in location, developing cost-effective, sustainable, modular systems and technologies to store and transport renewables at an industrial scale is imperative. Storing cheap renewable electricity into chemical bonds (i.e., chemical energy storage) could be a transformative opportunity for reliable and resilient grid energy storage. This approach enables renewables to be stored and shipped similarly to fossil fuels. Currently, the chemical industry primarily consumes fossil feedstock as an energy source, which has been the standard for over a century. A paradigm shift is required to move toward a more sustainable route for chemical synthesis by electrifying and decarbonizing the modern chemical industry. As renewable electricity costs decrease, (photo)electrosynthesis is gaining interest for synthesizing high-value and high-energy fuels and molecules in a clean, sustainable, and decentralized manner.The nitrogen cycle is one of the Earth's most critical biogeochemical cycles since nitrogen is a vital element for all living organisms. Artificial nitrogen fixation via a (photo)electrochemical system powered by renewables provides an alternative route to resource- and carbon-intensive thermochemical processes. (Photo)electrochemical nitrogen fixation at a large scale necessitates the discovery of active, selective, and stable heterogeneous (photo)electrocatalysts. In addition, the use of advanced in situ and operando spectroscopic techniques is needed to pinpoint the underlying reaction mechanisms. The selectivity of nitrogen (N2) molecules on the catalyst surface and suppressing thermodynamically favorable side reactions (e.g., hydrogen evolution reaction) are the main bottlenecks in improving the rate of (photo)electrochemical nitrogen fixation in aqueous solutions. The rational design of electrode, electrolyte, and reactors is required to weaken the strong nitrogen-nitrogen triple bond (N≡N) at or near ambient conditions. This Account covers our group's recent advances in synthesizing shape-controlled hybrid plasmonic nanoparticles, including plasmonic-semiconductor and plasmonic-transition metal nanostructures with increased surface areas. The nanocatalysts' selectivity and activity toward nitrogen conversion are benchmarked in liquid- and gas-phase electrochemical systems. We leverage operando vibrational-type spectroscopy (i.e., surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS)) to identify intermediate species relevant to nitrogen fixation at the electrode-electrolyte interface to gain mechanistic insights into reaction mechanisms, leading to the discovery of more efficient catalysts. Operando SERS revealed that the nitrogen reduction reaction (NRR) to ammonia on hybrid plasmonic-transition metal nanoparticle surfaces (e.g., Pd-Ag) occurs through an associative mechanism. In the NRR process, hydrazine (N2H4) is consumed as an intermediate species. A femtosecond pulsed laser is used to synthesize hybrid plasmonic photocatalysts with homogeneously distributed Pd atoms on a Au nanorod surface, resulting in enhanced optoelectronic and catalytic properties. The overarching goal is to develop modular photoelectrochemical systems for long-duration renewable energy storage. In the context of nitrogen fixation, we aim to propose strategies to manage the nitrogen cycle through the interconversion of N2 and active nitrogen-containing compounds (e.g., NH3, NOx), enabling a circular nitrogen economy with sustainable and positive social and economic outcomes. The versatile approaches presented in this Account can inform future opportunities in (photo)electrochemical energy conversion systems and solar fuel-based applications.

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