Conversion of Ammonia to Hydrazine Induced by High-Frequency Ultrasound

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2021 Nov 22;60(48):25230-25234. doi: 10.1002/anie.202109516. Epub 2021 Sep 12.

Abstract

Hydrazine is a chemical of utmost importance in our society, either for organic synthesis or energy use. The direct conversion of NH3 to hydrazine is highly appealing, but it remains a very difficult task because the degradation of hydrazine is thermodynamically more feasible than the cleavage of the N-H bond of NH3 . As a result, any catalyst capable of activating NH3 will thus unavoidably decompose N2 H4 . Here we show that cavitation bubbles, created by ultrasonic irradiation of aqueous NH3 at a high frequency, act as microreactors to activate and convert NH3 to NH species, without assistance of any catalyst, yielding hydrazine at the bubble-liquid interface. The compartmentation of in-situ-produced hydrazine in the bulk solution, which is maintained close to 30 °C, advantageously prevents its thermal degradation, a recurrent problem faced by previous technologies. This work also points towards a path to scavenge . OH radicals by adjusting the NH3 concentration.

Keywords: ammonia; cavitation bubbles; hydrazine; radicals; ultrasound.