Laser-Induced HKUST-1 Derived Porous Electrocatalyst: an Innovative Approach to Boost Sustainable Ammonia Synthesis

Aneena Lal, Hani Porat, Asmita Dutta, Manish Kumar Yadav, Arie Borenstein

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Conventional synthesis methods of metal-embedded graphene electrodes are time-consuming, energy-extensive, and complex multi-step fabrications, limiting the large-scale production of the materials. This study uses laser processing to fabricate HKUST-1 MOF (Cu3(C9H3O6)2)-derived porous Cu-Cu2O/C (L-HKUST-1) electrocatalyst under ambient conditions for the electrocatalytic nitrate reduction to ammonia (E-NRA). The swift, one-pot, binder-free, zero waste, and scalable laser processing technique enables directly printing Cu-Cu2O nanoparticles embedded in a carbon matrix on the nickel substrate under ambient temperature and pressure. Chemical and morphological characterization corroborate the transformation of pristine HKUST-1 to L-HKUST-1, thereby validating that the laser parameters (power, scan rate, resolution) are optimum for the successful fabrication of L-HKUST-1. Electrochemical nitrate reduction is a sustainable way to produce ammonia and can potentially promote a carbon-neutral economy. The electrochemical investigation demonstrates that the maximum yield of ammonia and Faradaic efficiency for L-HKUST-1 are 13,871.58 ± 17.11 µg h−1mg −1(cat) at −0.65 V versus RHE (Reversible Hydrogen Electrode) and 80 ± 6.7% at −0.45 V, respectively. Augmented positive overpotential at −10 mAcm−2 in the presence of the nitrate source confirms the superior electrocatalytic behavior for E-NRA.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAdvanced Sustainable Systems
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Keywords

  • ammonia
  • carbon
  • Cu nanoparticles
  • electrocatalytic nitrate reduction reaction
  • HKUST-1 MOF
  • laser carbonization
  • laser processing
  • MOF-derived metal/metal oxides

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Laser-Induced HKUST-1 Derived Porous Electrocatalyst: an Innovative Approach to Boost Sustainable Ammonia Synthesis'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this