This paper presents an innovative approach to producing energy-dense, carbon–neutral liquid ammonia as a
means for carrying energy. This approach synergistically integrates microwave reaction chemistry with novel
heterogeneous catalysis that decouples dinitrogen activation from high-temperature and high-pressure reactions,
altering reaction pathways and increasing ammonia formation rate. Results presented here demonstrate that
ammonia synthesis can be conducted at 280 ? and ambient pressure to achieve ~1 mmol ammonia/g cat/h over
supported ruthenium catalyst systems utilizing microwave irradiation. It is further shown that adding promoter
ions such as potassium, cerium, and barium significantly improves the ammonia production rate over undoped
ruthenium-based catalysts. This effect could be attributed to enhanced dielectric loss processes that lead to
stronger microwave absorption by the catalyst. Measurement of the equilibrium constant under microwave
conditions showed a higher ammonia yield than under thermal equilibrium conditions for both the iron- and
ruthenium-based catalysts. Finally, this study also illustrates the advantages of using a variable-frequency microwave reactor for ambient-pressure ammonia synthesis. Mechanistically, investigators believed that the oscillating electric fields of the radiation can couple with adsorbed nitrogen on the surface and accelerate its
dissociation. Since dinitrogen dissociation on the surface is rate limiting, this effectively accelerates the reaction.
Revised: July 10, 2020 |
Published: October 1, 2020
Citation
Hu J., C. Wildfire, A. Stiegman, R.A. Dagle, D. Shekhawat, V. Abdel-Sayed, and X. Bai, et al. 2020.Microwave-driven heterogeneous catalysis for activation of dinitrogen to ammonia under atmospheric pressure.Chemical Engineering Journal 397.PNNL-SA-143389.doi:10.1016/j.cej.2020.125388