Abstract

Ammonia, as an efficient hydrogen carrier, is emerging as an alternative energy resource to replace fossil fuels in the carbon–neutral era. Hydrogen production by water electrolysis seeks a lower potential dependent anodic reaction to overcome its energy-inefficiency that originates from the high potential anodic oxygen evolution reaction (OER). In this work, nickel phosphide supported on nitrogen doped-carbon (Ni2P@N-C) was prepared by one-pot synthesis for the bifunctional activity of hydrogen evolution (HER) and ammonia oxidation (AOR) reactions. The Ni2P@N-C electrocatalyst exhibits about 78% decomposition of ammonia compared to the initial concentration. The amount of hydrogen generated in a 0.5 M ammonia environment for 30 min is about 2.144 mmol(H2)/mol(NH3) h cm2. The fabricated ammonia electrolysis cell demonstrates a comparatively low energy consumption rate of 8.611 KWHkg(H2)−1. Thus, engineering a bifunctional electrocatalyst for a low potential anode oxidation reaction and the cathodic HER is a promising strategy to fabricate an energy efficient electrolysis cell for hydrogen production with a low cell potential requirement.

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