PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Novel catalysts improve efficiency of urea synthesis at ambient conditions

Novel catalysts improve efficiency of urea synthesis at ambient conditions
2021-02-26
(Press-News.org) Converting both nitrogen (N2) and carbon dioxide (CO2) into value-added urea molecules via C-N coupling reaction is a promising method to solve the problem of excessive CO2 emissions. Compared with huge energy consumption industrial processes, the electrochemical urea synthesis provides an appealing route under mild conditions. However, it still faces challenges of low catalytic activity and selectivity. A research team led by Prof. ZHANG Guangjin from the Institute of Process Engineering (IPE) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences fabricated Bi-BiVO4 Mott-Schottky heterostructure catalysts for efficient urea synthesis at ambient conditions. This work was published in Angewandte Chemie International Edition on Feb. 25. The spontaneous charge transfer at the heterointerfaces promotes the formation of space-charge region. "The space-charge region not only facilitates the targeted adsorption and activation of CO2 and N2 molecules on the generated electrophilic/nucleophilic regions, but also effectively suppresses CO poisoning and the formation of endothermic *NNH intermediate," said Prof. ZHANG. The adsorbed *N2 can promote CO2 reduction to form CO, and then the generated CO will further react with *N2 to produce the desirable *NCON* intermediate via electrochemical C-N coupling reaction. "The subsequent protonation process preferentially undergoes the alternating mechanism until the formation of urea," said Prof. ZHANG. The researchers used linear sweep voltammetry (LSV) to preliminarily evaluate the potential performance of urea electrosynthesis with Bi-BiVO4 hybrids. The results showed that Bi-BiVO4 hybrids exhibited good performance in electrocatalytic nitrogen reduction reaction (NRR) and CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR), which ensured the electrocatalytic production of urea process.

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Novel catalysts improve efficiency of urea synthesis at ambient conditions

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

KIMM develops all-round grippers for contact-free society

KIMM develops all-round grippers for contact-free society
2021-02-26
The Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials (KIMM) successfully developed all-round gripper* technology, enabling robots to hold objects of various shapes and stiffnesses. With the new technology, a single gripper can be used to handle different objects such as screwdrivers, bulbs, and coffee pots, and even food with delicate surfaces such as tofu, strawberries, and raw chicken. It is expected to expand applications in contact-free services such as household chores, cooking, serving, packaging, and manufacturing. *Gripper: A device that enables robots to hold and handle objects, ...

Researcher identifies potential new measure for Alzheimer's risk

Researcher identifies potential new measure for Alzheimers risk
2021-02-26
Memphis, Tenn. (February 25, 2021) - Early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease has been shown to reduce cost and improve patient outcomes, but current diagnostic approaches can be invasive and costly. A recent study, published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, has found a novel way to identify a high potential for developing Alzheimer's disease before symptoms occur. Ray Romano, PhD, RN, completed the research as part of his PhD in the Nursing Science Program at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Graduate Health Sciences. Dr. Romano conducted the research through the joint laboratory of Associate ...

Diversity among study participants credited with identifying gene linked to asthma

Diversity among study participants credited with identifying gene linked to asthma
2021-02-26
DETROIT (February 25, 2021) - Researchers at Henry Ford Health System, as part of a national asthma collaborative, have identified a gene variant associated with childhood asthma that underscores the importance of including diverse patient populations in research studies. The study is published in the print version of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. For 14 years researchers have known that a casual variant for early onset asthma resides on chromosome 17, which holds one of the most highly replicated and significant genetic associations with asthma. Henry Ford researchers acknowledged they would not have identified it in this study ...

Nanoparticles help untangle Alzheimer's disease amyloid beta plaques

Nanoparticles help untangle Alzheimers disease amyloid beta plaques
2021-02-26
ROCKVILLE, MD - Scientists are still a long way from being able to treat Alzheimer's Disease, in part because the protein aggregates that can become brain plaques, a hallmark of the disease, are hard to study. The plaques are caused by the amyloid beta protein, which gets misshapen and tangled in the brain. To study these protein aggregates in tissue samples, researchers often have to use techniques that can further disrupt them, making it difficult to figure out what's going on. But new research by Vrinda Sant, a graduate student, and Madhura Som, a recent PhD graduate, in the lab of Ratnesh Lal at the University of California, San Diego, provides a new technique for studying amyloid beta and could be useful in future Alzheimer's treatments. Sant and her colleagues will present their research ...

Social media use driven by search for reward, akin to animals seeking food

2021-02-26
Our use of social media, specifically our efforts to maximize "likes," follows a pattern of "reward learning," concludes a new study by an international team of scientists. Its findings, which appear in the journal Nature Communications, reveal parallels with the behavior of animals, such as rats, in seeking food rewards. "These results establish that social media engagement follows basic, cross-species principles of reward learning," explains David Amodio, a professor at New York University and the University of Amsterdam and one of the paper's authors. "These findings may help us understand why social media comes to dominate daily life for many people and provide clues, borrowed from research on reward learning and addiction, to how troubling online engagement may ...

New catalyst makes styrene manufacturing cheaper, greener

2021-02-26
Chemical engineering researchers have developed a new catalyst that significantly increases yield in styrene manufacturing, while simultaneously reducing energy use and greenhouse gas emissions. "Styrene is a synthetic chemical that is used to make a variety of plastics, resins and other materials," says Fanxing Li, corresponding author of the work and Alcoa Professor of Chemical Engineering at North Carolina State University. "Because it is in such widespread use, we are pleased that we could develop a technology that is cost effective and will reduce the environmental impact of styrene manufacturing." Industry estimates ...

Retroviruses are re-writing the koala genome and causing cancer

Retroviruses are re-writing the koala genome and causing cancer
2021-02-26
The koala retrovirus (KoRV) is a virus which, like other retroviruses such as HIV, inserts itself into the DNA of an infected cell. At some point in the past 50,000 years, KoRV has infected the egg or sperm cells of koalas, leading to offspring that carry the retrovirus in every cell in their body. The entire koala population of Queensland and New South Wales in Australia now carry copies of KoRV in their genome. All animals, including humans, have gone through similar "germ line" infections by retroviruses at some point in their evolutionary history and contain many ancient retroviruses in their genomes. These retroviruses have, over millions of years, mutated into degraded, inactive forms that are no longer harmful to the host. Since in most animal ...

URI researchers: Microbes deep beneath seafloor survive on byproducts of radioactive process

URI researchers: Microbes deep beneath seafloor survive on byproducts of radioactive process
2021-02-26
NARRAGANSETT, R.I. - February 26, 2021 - A team of researchers from the University of Rhode Island's END ...

The key to proper muscle growth

The key to proper muscle growth
2021-02-26
When a muscle grows, because its owner is still growing too or has started exercising regularly, some of the stem cells in this muscle develop into new muscle cells. The same thing happens when an injured muscle starts to heal. At the same time, however, the muscle stem cells must produce further stem cells - i.e., renew themselves - as their supply would otherwise be depleted very quickly. This requires that the cells involved in muscle growth communicate with each other. Muscle growth is regulated by the Notch signaling pathway Two years ago, a team of researchers led by Professor Carmen Birchmeier, head of the Developmental Biology/Signal Transduction ...

Improving water quality could help conserve insectivorous birds -- study

2021-02-26
A new study shows that a widespread decline in abundance of emergent insects - whose immature stages develop in lakes and streams while the adults live on land - can help to explain the alarming decline in abundance and diversity of aerial insectivorous birds (i.e. preying on flying insects) across the USA. In turn, the decline in emergent insects appears to be driven by human disturbance and pollution of water bodies, especially in streams. This study, published in END ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Black Britons from top backgrounds up to three times more likely to be downwardly mobile

Developing an antibody to combat age-related muscle atrophy

Brain aging and Alzheimer's: Insights from non-human primates

Can cells ‘learn’ like brains?

How cells get used to the familiar

Seemingly “broken” genes in coronaviruses may be essential for viral survival

Improving hurricane modeling with physics-informed machine learning

Seed slippage: Champati cha-cha

Hospitalization following outpatient diagnosis of RSV in adults

Beyond backlash: how feeling threatened by diversity can trigger positive change

Climate change exposure associated with increased emergency imaging

Incorrect AI advice influences diagnostic decisions

Building roots in glass, a bio-inspired approach to creating 3D microvascular networks using plants and fungi

Spinning fusion fuel for efficiency

The American Pediatric Society names Dr. Beth Tarini as the recipient of the 2025 Norman J. Siegel New Member Outstanding Science Award

New Clinical Study Confirms the Anti-Obesity Effects of Kimchi

Highly selective pathway for propyne semihydrogenation achieved via CoSb intermetallic catalyst

GERD linked to cardiovascular risk factors: New insights from Mendelian randomization study

Content moderators are influenced by online misinformation

Adulting, nerdiness and the importance of single-panel comics

Study helps explain how children learned for 99% of human history

The impact of misinformation on Spanish-language social media platforms

Populations overheat as major cities fail canopy goals: new research

By exerting “crowd control” over mouse cells, scientists make progress towards engineering tissues

First American Gastroenterological Association living guideline for moderate-to-severe ulcerative colitis

Labeling cell particles with barcodes

Groundwater pumping drives rapid sinking in California

Neuroscientists discover how the brain slows anxious breathing

New ion speed record holds potential for faster battery charging, biosensing

Haut.AI explores the potential of AI-enhanced fluorescence photography for non-invasive skin diagnostics

[Press-News.org] Novel catalysts improve efficiency of urea synthesis at ambient conditions