Cátia Alexandra Podence Alves , Priscila Hasse Palharim , Bruna Pratto , Andre Luiz da Silva , Douglas Gouvêa , Bruno Ramos
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Photocatalytic ammonia synthesis from nitrogen and water presents a promising pathway for decentralized sustainable ammonia production, leveraging the abundant solar energy. In this study, we explore the efficacy of three iron oxide polymorphs – goethite (α-FeO(OH)), magnetite (Fe3O4), and hematite (α-Fe2O3) – as photocatalysts for nitrogen reduction under ultraviolet (UV) light. The materials were synthesized using hydrothermal and polymeric precursor methods, characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS), UV–Vis spectroscopy, photoluminescence spectroscopy, and thermal analysis to understand their structural, surface, and optoelectronic properties. Among the materials tested, goethite demonstrated the highest ammonia production rate (20.6 µmol g−1h−1), which we attribute to its larger specific surface area and the stability of its surface hydroxyl groups, which play a critical role in facilitating the protonation and electron transfer necessary for nitrogen reduction. Curiously, magnetite also displayed some activity (10.3 µmol g−1h−1), likely due to the formation of a heterojunction with the co-occurring goethite phase. Hematite showed the fastest area-based production rate (1.05 µmol m−2h−1), suggesting it is the polymorph with highest density of active sites for N2 reduction. This work contributes to the ongoing search for greener and lower-cost alternatives to the Haber-Bosch process, with implications for both agriculture and energy storage.
期刊介绍:
JPPA publishes the results of fundamental studies on all aspects of chemical phenomena induced by interactions between light and molecules/matter of all kinds.
All systems capable of being described at the molecular or integrated multimolecular level are appropriate for the journal. This includes all molecular chemical species as well as biomolecular, supramolecular, polymer and other macromolecular systems, as well as solid state photochemistry. In addition, the journal publishes studies of semiconductor and other photoactive organic and inorganic materials, photocatalysis (organic, inorganic, supramolecular and superconductor).
The scope includes condensed and gas phase photochemistry, as well as synchrotron radiation chemistry. A broad range of processes and techniques in photochemistry are covered such as light induced energy, electron and proton transfer; nonlinear photochemical behavior; mechanistic investigation of photochemical reactions and identification of the products of photochemical reactions; quantum yield determinations and measurements of rate constants for primary and secondary photochemical processes; steady-state and time-resolved emission, ultrafast spectroscopic methods, single molecule spectroscopy, time resolved X-ray diffraction, luminescence microscopy, and scattering spectroscopy applied to photochemistry. Papers in emerging and applied areas such as luminescent sensors, electroluminescence, solar energy conversion, atmospheric photochemistry, environmental remediation, and related photocatalytic chemistry are also welcome.