Electrocatalytic reduction of nitrate: insight from manipulating adsorbate affinity

Location

SRTC 247

Cost / Admission

Free and open to the public

Contact

chemistry@pdx.edu

Dr. Kelsey Stoerzinger from Oregon State University will be the Department of Chemistry's guest speaker this week! 

Abstract of Electrocatalytic reduction of nitrate: insight from manipulating adsorbate affinity:

Fertilizer use and fossil-fuel combustion has increased nitrate concentrations in many wastewaters and watersheds to levels that threaten environmental and human health. Consequently, treatment of nitrate-contaminated water is a growing area of energy consumption. Electrocatalytic nitrate reduction offers a distributable treatment solution also capable of producing value-added products (e.g. ammonium), using electrons as a reducing agent at ambient temperatures and pressures. However, nitrate reduction occurs at similar electrochemical potentials to water reduction, reducing the Faradaic efficiency particularly in dilute nitrate concentrations characteristic of wastewater. Here we consider how changing a catalysts’ affinity for nitrate (via oxide supports) or its relative affinity for protons (via electronic structure) impact activity and selectivity of the electrocatalytic nitrate reduction reaction in neutral media. We build insight into the reaction mechanism through reaction rate order analysis, microkinetic modeling, and in situ photoelectron spectroscopy." (Source)

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