Efficient and Selective Electrochemical Nitrate Reduction to N 2 Using a Flow-Through Zero-Gap Electrochemical Reactor with a Reconstructed Cu(OH) 2 Cathode: Insights into the Importance of Inter-Electrode Distance

Electrochemically converting nitrate, a widely distributed nitrogen contaminant, into harmless N is a feasible and environmentally friendly route to close the anthropogenic nitrogen-based cycle. However, it is currently hindered by sluggish kinetics and low N selectivity, as well as scarce attention...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2024-03, Vol.58 (10), p.4824-4836
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Jianjun, Zhu, Yunqing, Wen, Kaiyue, Pan, Fan, Ma, Hongrui, Niu, Junfeng, Wang, Chuanyi, Zhao, Jincai
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Electrochemically converting nitrate, a widely distributed nitrogen contaminant, into harmless N is a feasible and environmentally friendly route to close the anthropogenic nitrogen-based cycle. However, it is currently hindered by sluggish kinetics and low N selectivity, as well as scarce attention to reactor configuration. Here, we report a flow-through zero-gap electrochemical reactor that shows a high performance of nitrate reduction with 100% conversion and 80.36% selectivity of desired N in the chlorine-free system at 100 mg-N·L NO while maintaining a rapid reduction kinetics of 0.07676 min . More importantly, the mass transport and current utilization efficiency are significantly improved by shortening the inter-electrode distance, especially in the zero-gap electrocatalytic system where the current efficiency reached 50.15% at 5 mA·cm . Detailed characterizations demonstrated that during the electroreduction process, partial Cu(OH) on the cathode surface was reconstructed into stable Cu/Cu O as the active phase for efficient nitrate reduction. In situ characterizations revealed that the highly selective *NO to *N conversion and the N-N coupling step played crucial roles during the selective reduction of NO to N in the zero-gap electrochemical system. In addition, theoretical calculations demonstrated that improving the key intermediate *N coverage could effectively facilitate the N-N coupling step, thereby promoting N selectivity. Moreover, the environmental and economic benefits and long-term stability shown by the treatment of real nitrate-containing wastewater make our proposed electrocatalytic system more attractive for practical applications.
ISSN:0013-936X
1520-5851
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.3c10936