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Unlocking a water coordination environment in co-based metal-organic frameworks for advanced nitrate-to-ammonia electroreduction.

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posted on 2025-09-19, 10:27 authored by P Muthukumar, Z Ullah, X Zhang, H Ullah, Y Liu, L Li, S Tian, X Zhou, SP Anthony, Y Zuo, C Lv, X Wang, C Wang
Electrochemical nitrate reduction to ammonia (e-NO3RR) offers a promising and sustainable alternative to the traditional Haber-Bosch process, enabling decentralized ammonia production under ambient conditions. However, the efficiency of e-NO3RR is limited by the sluggish reaction kinetics due to the high activation energy barriers, poor mass transport, and the weaker adsorption affinity of the catalyst surface. In this study, we report the design and synthesis of a stable three-dimensional cobalt-based metal-organic framework (HUST-38), constructed from benzene-1,4-dicarboxylate ligand and DABCO, featuring water coordination within its framework. Impressively, the as-prepared HUST-38 delivers a high NH3 Faradaic efficiency of 95.7% and a high NH3 yield rate of 13.38 mg h-1 mgcat-1 at -0.6 V vs RHE, significantly outperforming the control sample of HUST-39 (3.98 mg h-1 mgcat-1, nonwater coordination) and the mostly reported single-site solid electrocatalysts. Various in situ measurements disclose that the labile solvent coordination in HUST-38 promotes water molecule accessibility to the catalytically active metal centers, hence augmenting localized *H enrichment and enhancing NO3- reduction. The theoretical calculations further substantiate the essential function of metal coordination microenvironments in modulating the electrocatalytic process, specifically by reducing free energy barriers associated with key reaction intermediates and enhancing the adsorption and desorption kinetics of reactants and products, ultimately leading to improved electrocatalytic activity and efficiency. The present work provides a foundation for the structural design of metal organic frameworks to develop efficient electrocatalysts.<p></p>

Funding

2022YFB3807201

52272202

W2421027

9020005

9610663

9610715

9446008

National Key R&D Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

City University of Hong Kong

ITF–RTH - Global STEM Professorship

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© 2025 The author(s). For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.

Submission date

2025-04-27

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Chemical Society via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Journal of the American Chemical Society

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Place published

United States

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2025-08-08T12:02:08Z

FOA date

08/08/2025 13:11

Citation

Published online 6 August 2025

Department

  • Engineering

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