Combinatorial Screening of Bimetallic Electrocatalysts for Nitrogen Reduction to Ammonia Using a High-Throughput Gas Diffusion Electrode Cell Design

Journal Article (2022)
Authors

Martin Kolen (TU Delft - ChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion and Storage)

Grigorios Antoniadis (Student TU Delft)

H. Schreuders (TU Delft - ChemE/O&O groep)

B. Boshuizen (TU Delft - ChemE/O&O groep)

D.D. Van Noordenne (TU Delft - ChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion and Storage)

Davide Ripepi (TU Delft - ChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion and Storage)

W.A. Smith (TU Delft - ChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion and Storage)

F.M. Mulder (TU Delft - ChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion and Storage)

Research Group
ChemE/O&O groep
Copyright
© 2022 M. Kolen, Grigorios Antoniadis, H. Schreuders, B. Boshuizen, D.D. van Noordenne, D. Ripepi, W.A. Smith, F.M. Mulder
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.1149/1945-7111/aca6a7
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 M. Kolen, Grigorios Antoniadis, H. Schreuders, B. Boshuizen, D.D. van Noordenne, D. Ripepi, W.A. Smith, F.M. Mulder
Research Group
ChemE/O&O groep
Issue number
12
Volume number
169
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1149/1945-7111/aca6a7
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

The electrochemical nitrogen reduction reaction (NRR) is a promising alternative to the current greenhouse gas emission intensive process to produce ammonia (NH3) from nitrogen (N2). However, finding an electrocatalyst that promotes NRR over the competing hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) has proven to be difficult. This difficulty could potentially be addressed by accelerating the electrocatalyst development for NRR by orders of magnitude using high-throughput (HTP) workflows. In this work, we developed a HTP gas diffusion electrode (GDE) cell to screen up to 16 electrocatalysts in parallel. The key innovation of the cell is the use of expanded Polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) gas diffusion layers (GDL) which simplifies the handling of catalyst arrays compared to carbon fabrics and enables sufficient N2 mass transport. We demonstrate the robustness of the HTP workflow by screening 528 bimetallic catalysts of composition AB (A,B = Ag, Al, Au, Co, Cu, Fe, Mn, Mo, Ni, Pd, Re, Ru, W) for NRR activity. None of the materials produced ammonia significantly over background level which emphasizes the difficulty of finding active electrocatalysts for NRR and narrows down the search space for future studies.