Highly loaded bimetallic iron-cobalt catalysts for hydrogen release from ammonia

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Abstract

Ammonia is a storage molecule for hydrogen, which can be released by catalytic decomposition. Inexpensive iron catalysts suffer from a low activity due to a too strong iron-nitrogen binding energy compared to more active metals such as ruthenium. Here, we show that this limitation can be overcome by combining iron with cobalt resulting in a Fe-Co bimetallic catalyst. Theoretical calculations confirm a lower metal-nitrogen binding energy for the bimetallic catalyst resulting in higher activity. Operando spectroscopy reveals that the role of cobalt in the bimetallic catalyst is to suppress the bulk-nitridation of iron and to stabilize this active state. Such catalysts are obtained from Mg(Fe,Co)2O4 spinel pre-catalysts with variable Fe:Co ratios by facile co-precipitation, calcination and reduction. The resulting Fe-Co/MgO catalysts, characterized by an extraordinary high metal loading reaching 74 wt.%, combine the advantages of a ruthenium-like electronic structure with a bulk catalyst-like microstructure typical for base metal catalysts.

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Chen, S., Jelic, J., Rein, D., Najafishirtari, S., Schmidt, F. P., Girgsdies, F., … Behrens, M. (2024). Highly loaded bimetallic iron-cobalt catalysts for hydrogen release from ammonia. Nature Communications, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44661-6

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