Abstract

Electrochemical nitrate reduction to ammonia offers an attractive solution to environmental sustainability and clean energy production but suffers from the sluggish *NO hydrogenation with the spin–state transitions. Herein, we report that the manipulation of oxygen vacancies can contrive spin−polarized Fe1−Ti pairs on monolithic titanium electrode that exhibits an attractive NH3 yield rate of 272,000 μg h−1 mgFe−1 and a high NH3 Faradic efficiency of 95.2% at −0.4 V vs. RHE, far superior to the counterpart with spin−depressed Fe1−Ti pairs (51000 μg h–1 mgFe–1) and the mostly reported electrocatalysts. The unpaired spin electrons of Fe and Ti atoms can effectively interact with the key intermediates, facilitating the *NO hydrogenation. Coupling a flow−through electrolyzer with a membrane-based NH3 recovery unit, the simultaneous nitrate reduction and NH3 recovery was realized. This work offers a pioneering strategy for manipulating spin polarization of electrocatalysts within pair sites for nitrate wastewater treatment.

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