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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Oxidation of Ammonia in Water Microdroplets Produces Nitrate and Molecular Hydrogen.

Year:
2024
Authors:
Song X et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Chemistry · United States

Abstract

Water microdroplets containing dissolved ammonia (30-300 μM) are sprayed through a copper oxide mesh with a 200 μm average pore size, resulting in the formation of nitrate (NO<sub>3</sub><sup>-</sup>) and the release of molecular hydrogen (H<sub>2</sub>). The products result from a redox process that takes place at the liquid-solid interface through contact electrification, where no external potential is applied. Oxidation is initiated by superoxide radical anions (O<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup>) that originate from the oxygen in the air surrounding the microdroplets and from the hydroxyl radicals (OH<sup>•</sup>) originating from the water-air interface. Two spin traps (TEMPO and DMPO) capture these radicals as well as NH<sub>2</sub>OH<sup>+•</sup>, HNO, NO<sup>•</sup>, NO<sub>2</sub><sup>•</sup>, and NOOH, which are detected by mass spectrometry. We also directly observed N<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub><sup>-•</sup> by the same means. We found that the hydrogen atom from the ammonia molecule can be set free not only in the form of H<sup>•</sup> but also as H<sub>2</sub>, which is detected using a residue gas analyzer. The oxidation process can be significantly enhanced by a factor of 3 when the sprayed microdroplets are irradiated with ultraviolet light (265 nm, 5 W). 35% of 300 μM ammonia can be degraded within 20 μs, and the nitrate conversion rate is estimated to be 15 nmol·mg<sup>-1</sup>·h<sup>-1</sup>.

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Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/39178340