High-entropy switching with 3d metal crossover sites for zinc–nitrite battery and ammonia supply
- Authors
- Theerthagiri, Jayaraman; Park, Juhyeon; Kumari, M.L. Aruna; Kumar, Anuj; Oh, Yewon; Choi, Myong Yong
- Issue Date
- Dec-2025
- Publisher
- Elsevier BV
- Keywords
- Electricity and ammonia production; High-entropy materials; Interphase switching; Prototype Zn–nitrite solution battery; Pulsed laser irradiation in liquids
- Citation
- Applied Catalysis B: Environment and Energy, v.378
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Applied Catalysis B: Environment and Energy
- Volume
- 378
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/79094
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.apcatb.2025.125620
- ISSN
- 0926-3373
1873-3883
- Abstract
- The electrochemical nitrite reduction (eNO2R) reaction advances a green strategy to ammonia (NH3) production, while zinc–nitrite solution batteries enable a “three-in-one” strategy for electricity, NH3 generation, and NO2− removal. However, developing low-cost, selective, and durable electrocatalysts remains a challenge. Herein, a high-entropy Prussian blue analog (HEPBA) was synthesized via coprecipitation of divalent 3d transition metal crossover (Co, Ni, Cu, and Zn) with trivalent Fe species. This then underwent high-entropy interphase switching into a single-phase spinel high-entropy oxide (FeCoNiCuZn-high-entropy oxide [HEO]) via calcination, followed by pulsed laser irradiation in liquids to form a high-entropy alloy (FeCoNiCuZn-high-entropy alloy [HEA]). The HEA electrocatalyst reaches a Faradaic efficiency of 88.9 % for NH4+ production during eNO2R, with a utmost yield rate of 894.3 μg h−1 cm−2 at −1.0 V versus Ag/AgCl, while maintaining stability over multiple cycles. The superior eNO2R performance of FeCoNiCuZn-HEA, compared to HEPBA and HEO, stems from its stable atomic arrangement, along with the combined effects of lattice defects and high-entropy stabilization. In situ and ex situ spectroscopy, validated via density functional theory, confirm the eNO2R pathway on the uniformly distributed active sites on the HEA surface, involving NO2− adsorption, deoxygenation, protonation, and NH4+ formation through *NO and *NOH2 intermediates. Finally, an aqueous Zn–NO2− battery using the HEA cathode exposes a high open circuit voltage of 1.4 V versus Zn/Zn2+ and a power density of 2.14 mW cm−2, along with an impressive NH4+ production. © 2025 Elsevier B.V.
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