Northwestern University scientists are the first to develop a catalyst that can perform a remarkable feat found only in nature: take nitrogen from the air and turn it into ammonia under natural conditions. (Ammonia is the critical component in fertilizer.) If fully realized the process might displace more than 1 percent of world energy use.

Powered by the solar power in sunlight, the new method offers a promise for a more environmentally friendly fertilizer. And no high temperatures or pressures are required.

Details of Northwestern’s nitrogenase mimic have been published by the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

Inorganic chemist Mercouri G. Kanatzidis the Charles E. and Emma H. Morrison Professor of Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences who led the research said, “This is a big-deal reaction, turning nitrogen into ammonia under ambient conditions. Scientists have been fascinated by the biological enzyme nitrogenase, which catalyzes the reaction in nature, for more than 60 years. Now we have created a successful mimic of nature’s process.”

Plants rely on the nitrogen fixation process for nutrition and growth. Nitrogen straight from the atmosphere is inaccessible to plants, so the nutrient must be in a reduced form, such as ammonia.

The Northwestern method uses light to catalyze the important reaction. A process that uses abundant solar energy to turn nitrogen into ammonia offers an attractive alternative to the Haber-Bosch process, the industrial standard for producing ammonia, Kanatzidis explained. Right now the Haber-Bosch process consumes more than 1 percent of the world’s energy supply.

For now the discovery is at point of proof for the concept. Yet this cracking open of a new production system is very impressive.

Nitrogen (N2) in the atmosphere is a very stable and stubborn molecule. It doesn’t like to interact with other molecules. Nitrogen’s three single covalent bonds are very difficult to break.

To attack the problem, Kanatzidis and his colleagues turned to an interesting material they had developed earlier, a “chalcogel”. Chalcogel is porous material, similar to a sponge, providing a lot of surface area, which has advantages. The researchers made the chalcogel using a cluster of iron, molybdenum and sulfur (FeMoS), the key metals found in nitrogenase that reduce nitrogen.

Kanatzidis said , “With its high surface area, the material offers a lot of reactive sites where the nitrogen can react as it flows through.”

Another advantage of the chalcogel material is its color; it is black, so it absorbs a lot of light. The researchers thought they might be able to tap that energy.

“My colleagues and I said, ‘Let’s do a crazy experiment,'” Kanatzidis said. “Let’s excite the chalcogel with light, give it some nitrogen and see if the material will reduce the nitrogen to ammonia. To our surprise, we saw ammonia forming, and the ammonia got more and more intense over time.”

The FeMoS co-factor in the chalcogel binds to nitrogen and reduces it by eight electrons, making two ammonia molecules and one hydrogen molecule, just as happens in nature.

After the early positive results, the Northwestern researchers conducted a number of control experiments that confirmed the ammonia produced did indeed come from the nitrogen and not some other source.

The chalcogel material is very robust. “This catalyst can go and go and go and still work,” Kanatzidis said. “Nitrogenase in biological systems has to rebuild itself every six to eight hours.”

The researchers do note that their catalyst is slower than nitrogenase – approximately 1,000 times slower.

“But nitrogenase had two or three billion years to evolve,” Kanatzidis said. “We are happy that our material reduces nitrogen much like nitrogenase. It’s a fantastic starting point. Now we are trying to figure out how this material works and how it can become faster. We’ve already made some progress in this direction.”

Good work. Stay with it. About 6 billion hungry people need this technology to keep improving.


Comments

1 Comment so far

  1. jpstraley on February 11, 2015 10:14 AM

    This will get tweaked up to a practical level, then you’ll see third world farmers adding a lot more N. First worlders will benefit, too, but the addition of N will be of concern so that some regulation will result. Still, the result will be a lot more N trickling into rivers and oceans, resulting in more eutrophic conditions.

    Expensive N fertilizer encourages using the “right” amount of fertilizer.

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