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Developing catalysts for ammonia synthesis under mild conditions is of paramount importance but remains a grand challenge, primarily due to the trade-off between efficient dinitrogen activation and hydrogen poisoning. Nitride-supported metal catalysts exhibit remarkably low-temperature activity, yet the atomic origin of their synergy remains a subject of intense debate. Building on our recently established generalized theories of strong metal-metal interaction (SMMI) and encapsulation, we combine <i>ab initio</i> atomistic thermodynamics and machine-learning potential-driven molecular dynamics simulations to systematically construct a unified mechanistic framework for these highly active systems. Using lanthanum nitride (LaN)-supported cobalt (Co) nanoparticles as a prototypical model, we reveal that, driven by SMMI and facilitated by nitrogen vacancies, the nitride support spontaneously restructures to encapsulate metal nanoparticles via the formation of subnitride overlayers. This thermodynamically stable encapsulated architecture constructs contiguous perimeter sites─involving both low-valent La cations and electron-rich cobalt metal─that fundamentally alter the catalytic landscape, while intrinsically securing the antisintering stability of small Co nanoparticles. First-principles calculations reveal that these perimeter sites cooperatively facilitate N<sub>2</sub> activation while simultaneously suppressing H-poisoning. Consequently, microkinetic simulations yield an apparent activation energy of 50 kJ mol<sup>-1</sup>, in good agreement with experimental values. By naturally accounting for a diverse array of experimental observations, this work establishes SMMI-driven encapsulation as a robust physical framework for understanding and designing nitride-based catalysts for ammonia synthesis under mild conditions.
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society
Volume 148, Issue 12, pp. 13347-13357
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.6c01112