Efficient Electrochemical Co‐Reduction of Carbon Dioxide and Nitrate to Urea with High Faradaic Efficiency on Cobalt‐Based Dual‐Sites

Xiaoya Fan(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Chaozhen Liu(Ministry of Education), Xun He(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Zixiao Li(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Luchao Yue(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Wenxi Zhao(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Jun Li(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Yan Wang(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Tingshuai Li(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Yongsong Luo(Shandong Normal University), Dongdong Zheng(Shandong Normal University), Shengjun Sun(Shandong Normal University), Qian Liu(Chengdu University), Luming Li(Chengdu University), Wei Chu(Chengdu University), Feng Gong(Ministry of Education), Bo Tang(Shandong Normal University), Yongchao Yao(Sichuan University), Xuping Sun(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China)
Advanced Materials
April 2, 2024
Cited by 179

Abstract

Abstract Renewable electricity‐powered nitrate/carbon dioxide co‐reduction reaction toward urea production paves an attractive alternative to industrial urea processes and offers a clean on‐site approach to closing the global nitrogen cycle. However, its large‐scale implantation is severely impeded by challenging C–N coupling and requires electrocatalysts with high activity/selectivity. Here, cobalt‐nanoparticles anchored on carbon nanosheet (Co NPs@C) are proposed as a catalyst electrode to boost yield and Faradaic efficiency (FE) toward urea electrosynthesis with enhanced C–N coupling. Such Co NPs@C renders superb urea‐producing activity with a high FE reaching 54.3% and a urea yield of 2217.5 µg h −1 mg cat. −1 , much superior to the Co NPs and C nanosheet counterparts, and meanwhile shows strong stability. The Co NPs@C affords rich catalytically active sites, fast reactant diffusion, and sufficient catalytic surfaces‐electrolyte contacts with favored charge and ion transfer efficiencies. The theoretical calculations reveal that the high‐rate formation of *CO and *NH 2 intermediates is crucial for facilitating urea synthesis.


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