Ammonia (NH3), as one of the most common industrial chemicals, is essential for nitrogenous fertilizer production and shows potential as a next-generation green fuel. Industrial ammonia synthesis relies on the reaction of fossil fuel-derived hydrogen and nitrogen (Haber-Bosch method) under high temperature (~500 °C) and high pressure (>15 MPa), which consumes ∼2% of global power and discharges ∼1.5% of global greenhouse gas.
A team from Tianjin University in China developed an electromagnetic field (EMF)-assisted H-B technique for ammonia synthesis under mild conditions by adopting commercial iron-based catalysts. The onset temperature with EMF assistance is 100 °C, which is obviously lower than that without EMF assistance (300 °C).
In a typical scale-up experiment with 80 g commercial catalysts, the EMF-assisted H-B technique obviously increases the ammonia yield (~5 times) and decreases the energy consumption (~2.7 times). The enhanced catalytic performance can be ascribed to the EMF inducing more electron transfer from Fe orbitals to N≡N orbitals in both side-on and end-on adsorption modes.
They constructed a pilot-scale system with a production capacity of 10,000 kg per year for EMF-assisted thermal catalysis at Tianjin University, taking the first step in the development of EMF-assisted thermal catalysis for industrialization from the laboratory.
They are carrying out further scale-up research on EMF-assisted thermal catalysis in Qinghai Province, which is rich in renewable energy, to explore a feasible industrial path for the breakthrough of large-scale storage and transportation bottlenecks of renewable energy to promote the early realization of the “dual carbon” goal.
The research is published in the journal Science Bulletin.
More information:
Bao Shun Zhang et al, Electromagnetic field-assisted low-temperature ammonia synthesis, Science Bulletin (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.scib.2023.07.037
Citation:
Electromagnetic field-assisted thermal catalysis enabling low-temperature, low-pressure, large-scale ammonia synthesis (2023, September 26)
retrieved 26 September 2023
from https://phys.org/news/2023-09-electromagnetic-field-assisted-thermal-catalysis-enabling.html
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