News Release

In situ generated sulfate-facilitated efficient nitrate electrosynthesis on 2D PdS2 with unique imitating growth feature

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Shanghai Jiao Tong University Journal Center

In Situ Generated Sulfate-Facilitated Efficient Nitrate Electrosynthesis on 2D PdS2 with Unique Imitating Growth Feature

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  • Unique imitating growth feature for PdS2 on different 2D substrates has been firstly discovered for constructing 2D/2D heterostructures by interface engineering.
  • The thin and small PdS2 nanoplates with active defects can be inducted by poly(1-vinyl-3-ethylimidazolium bromide (PVEIB), resulting in the obtained PdS2@PVEIB/PPy/GO exhibited the excellent nitrogen oxidation reaction (NOR) electroactivity with the outstanding stability and selectivity.
  • The in situ generation of SO42−, caused by the oxidation during the preparation process or exposed in air, as well as at high NOR potential, plays a crucial role in reducing the activation energy of the NOR process, leading to improved efficiency for nitrate production.
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Credit: Rui Zhang, Hui Mao, Ziyi Wang, Shengke Ma, Shuyao Wu, Qiong Wu, Daliang Liu, Hui Li, Yang Fu, Xiaoning Li, Tianyi Ma.

Electrocatalytic nitrogen oxidation (NOR)—the green alternative to the century-old, energy-guzzling Ostwald process—has long been stifled by the formidable 941 kJ mol⁻¹ N≡N bond and the relentless competition from oxygen evolution. In a breakthrough review published in Nano-Micro Letters, researchers from Liaoning University and RMIT University, led by Professors Hui Mao and Tianyi Ma, demonstrate how interface-engineered 2D PdS2 nanoplates decisively overcome both hurdles, delivering record nitrate yields with unprecedented stability.

Why PdS2 Now Matters

  • Imitating-Growth Morphology: PdS2 “copies” the topography of its 2D substrate. Anchored on PVEIB/PPy/GO, it crystallizes into ultra-thin, defect-rich nanoplates (~25 nm) that expose abundant sulfur vacancies—prime sites for catalysis.
  • Self-Generating Sulfate: Those same vacancies spontaneously oxidize to SO42- during synthesis or at high anodic potentials. This in-situ sulfate slashes the activation energy of the rate-limiting N2→*NNOH step from 2.95 eV to 1.92 eV, a 35 % cut that outperforms state-of-the-art Ru-doped oxides.
  • Triple Synergy: GO supplies a vast surface, PPy accelerates electron transport, and PVEIB imidazolium groups sterically confine growth—yielding a composite with 93.9 µg h-1 mg-1 nitrate productivity and 7.36 % Faradaic efficiency at only 2.05 V vs RHE.

Enduring Performance Under Harsh Conditions

  • 30-hour Continuous Electrolysis: No decay in current or crystal structure, verified by post-mortem TEM and synchrotron HERFD-XANES.
  • Six-Cycle Stress Test: >95 % activity retained, versus >80 % loss for bare PdS2.
  • 100 % Selectivity: Ion chromatography detects only NO3⁻—zero NO2⁻, NH3, or gaseous by-products.

Mechanistic Insight: Sulfate as the Silent Co-Catalyst

Real-time ATR-SEIRAS captures the ascent of bridging bidentate nitrate peaks (1245 & 1646 cm-1) that mirror anodic current, confirming an associative distal pathway. DFT charge-density maps reveal that SO42- modulates electron donation from Pd to *NNOH, weakening the N–N bond and accelerating turnover. Electrochemical impedance collapses from 2.7 kΩ to 310 Ω, underscoring faster interfacial charge transfer.

Future Outlook

The imitating-growth protocol is substrate-agnostic—ready to be ported to MXene, g-C3N4, or other novel TMDs. Scalable hydrothermal synthesis (>1 g batches) and binder-free electrode casting already deliver >200 mA cm-2 in a flow-cell prototype. Coupled with renewable electricity, this sulfate-coupled platform could decentralize nitrate production, cutting CO2 emissions from the Ostwald process by more than 70 %. Stay tuned as the Mao and Ma team advances from coin cells to containerized NOR units, turning air and water into fertilizer—one volt at a time.


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