Abstract
Ruthenium (Ru)-based catalysts are among the most promising systems for ammonia (NH3) synthesis under mild conditions, where the catalyst support plays a decisive role in modulating Ru activity. In this work, we report nitrogen-doped praseodymium oxide (PrOxNy), synthesized through a urea-assisted hydrothermal method, as a highly efficient support for Ru in atmospheric-pressure NH3 synthesis. Structural, spectroscopic, and isotopic tracing analyses reveal that, unlike reactive rare-earth nitrides or hydronitrides that participate in ammonia synthesis via chemical looping, the incorporated nitrogen atoms in PrOxNy do not directly engage in the NH3 synthesis cycle. Instead, nitrogen functions as a “defect inducer”—promoting the formation of abundant oxygen vacancies (OVs). These OVs act as strong electron donors to Ru nanoparticles, enhancing Ru electron density to promote the N2 activation and helps migrate hydrogen poisoning. Compared to nitrogen-free Ru/PrOx, Ru/PrOxNy reduces the activation energy from 91 to 84 kJ/mol, achieving an NH3 yield of 4195 μmol g−1 h−1 (twice higher) at 0.1 MPa and 400 °C, with long-term stability over 100 h. Notably, Pr-based oxides exhibit unique advantages in vacancy engineering due to their favorable OV formation energetics, outperforming Ce- and La-based analogues. This study demonstrates a generalizable strategy for activating rare-earth oxide supports via heteroatom-induced vacancy engineering, clarifying the role of nitrogen in oxide supports and offering new insights into the rational design of high-performance Ru catalysts for sustainable ammonia synthesis.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 173538 |
| Journal | Chemical Engineering Journal |
| Volume | 530 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 15 Feb 2026 |
Keywords
- Ammonia synthesis
- Chemical looping mechanism
- Nitrogen incorporation
- Ru-supported catalysts
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