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Abstract Ambient electrochemical N 2 reduction is emerging as a highly promising alternative to the Haber–Bosch process but is typically hampered by a high reaction barrier and competing hydrogen evolution, leading to an extremely low Faradaic efficiency. Here, we demonstrate that under ambient conditions, a single-atom catalyst, iron on nitrogen-doped carbon, could positively shift the ammonia synthesis process to an onset potential of 0.193 V, enabling a dramatically enhanced Faradaic efficiency of 56.55%. The only doublet coupling representing 15 NH 4 + in an isotopic labeling experiment confirms reliable NH 3 production data. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest efficient N 2 access to the single-atom iron with only a small energy barrier, which benefits preferential N 2 adsorption instead of H adsorption via a strong exothermic process, as further confirmed by first-principle calculations. The released energy helps promote the following process and the reaction bottleneck, which is widely considered to be the first hydrogenation step, is successfully overcome.
Wang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.