Magnetic field during catalyst synthesis triples ammonia yield

Scanning electron microscopy shows CoFe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>4</sub> thin films after their use as an electrocatalyst for ammonia synthesis from nitrate. The significantly &ldquo;rougher&rdquo; surface of the CoFe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>4</sub> produced at 1 Tesla is particularly striking.</p>
<p>&nbsp;

Scanning electron microscopy shows CoFe2O4 thin films after their use as an electrocatalyst for ammonia synthesis from nitrate. The significantly “rougher” surface of the CoFe2O4 produced at 1 Tesla is particularly striking.

  © S. Mathur /Univ. Cologne

Applying an external magnetic field during the synthesis of CoFe₂O₄ electrocatalysts triples the ammonia yield during electrocatalytic conversion. The magnetic field alters the surface states of the spinel oxide thin films, making catalytically active sites more accessible. In the journal 'Advanced Functional Materials', a team led by Marcel Risch at HZB and Sanjay Mathur at University of Cologne demonstrates a scalable strategy for developing next-generation electrocatalysts for efficient and sustainable chemical production.

From the chemical industry and the hydrogen economy to the production of ammonia-based fertilisers, new catalyst technologies hold the key to greater sustainability and efficiency. Take ammonia synthesis, for example: the well-known Haber-Bosch process consumes between 1 and 2 per cent of the world’s energy and is responsible for almost 1 per cent of annual greenhouse gas emissions. However, the energy-intensive Haber-Bosch process is no longer the only option. A newer approach is based on the electrochemical conversion of nitrate into ammonia. Nitrate accumulates in vast quantities as slurry in intensive agriculture and is particularly harmful to waterways. However, suitable catalysts are needed to suppress the formation of hydrogen and nitrogen-containing by-products during the conversion of nitrate to ammonia. In this regard, the class of spinel transition metal oxides is considered particularly promising in this regard, especially thin films of CoFe₂O₄.

An external magnetic field applied during the synthesis of these catalysts can enormously increase their efficiency and selectivity, as demonstrated by a study led by Dr Marcel Risch, HZB, and Prof. Dr Sanjay Mathur, University of Cologne. ‘By applying a magnetic field during chemical vapour deposition, we aimed to tailor the surface states and cation distribution in CoFe₂O₄ thin films to create more efficient surface-engineered electrocatalysts,” says Mathur, who led the synthesis of the materials. This assumption was confirmed very clearly.

The CoFe₂O₄ layers produced under 1 T magnetic field performed best: compared to CoFe₂O₄ produced without a magnetic field, they produced three times more ammonia, demonstrating the effectiveness of magnetic-field-controlled surface engineering. When comparing the ammonia yield of the CoFe₂O₄-1T catalyst with that of pure iron oxide Fe3O4-1T, also synthesised under a magnetic field of 1 Tesla, the ammonia yield was several fold (22 times) higher. This shows that cobalt plays a decisive role in nitrate reduction. Supplementary DFT calculations confirm that cobalt does indeed suppress the competing hydrogen evolution reaction whilst simultaneously promoting nitrate conversion. ‘The applied magnetic field stabilises the catalytically active Co²⁺ ions at octahedral sites, which evidently lowers the kinetic barriers for nitrate reduction,’ explains Risch. 

The study demonstrates that alongside temperature and pressure, a magnetic field serves as an effective parameter for controlling cation distribution, magnetic domain structures and surface states at the atomic level during thin-film catalysts growth. Although the magnetic field is only applied during thin-film growth, the improvements continue to have a lasting positive effect even during field-free electrochemical operation. ‘This makes our approach particularly promising for practical applications, since no external magnetic field is required during electrolysis,’ says Risch.

Images taken with a scanning electron microscope show that the surfaces of the CoFe2O4 thin films are systematically much rougher – and thus larger – the stronger the magnetic field during synthesis. ‘We hope that these results will stimulate broader exploration  of magnetic-field-assisted strategies for tailoring  electrocatalysts,’ says Mathur.

arö

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • AI agents deliver results – but do they reason scientifically?
    News
    01.06.2026
    AI agents deliver results – but do they reason scientifically?
    A research team co-led by Kevin Maik Jablonka from the Helmholtz Institute for Polymers in Energy Applications Jena (HIPOLE Jena) and N. M. Anoop Krishnan from the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi has developed Corral, a new benchmark for AI agents in science. The preprint “AI scientists produce results without reasoning scientifically” has been published on arXiv (https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2604.18805). The analysis shows that current systems can execute scientific workflows and deliver results; however, they often do not follow the basic principles of scientific testing and reasoning.
  • Materials chemistry shapes the future of catalysis
    Science Highlight
    29.05.2026
    Materials chemistry shapes the future of catalysis
    The synthesis of materials can serve as a tool for developing smart, adaptive electrocatalysts. This rapidly evolving field of research involves in-situ analytics, data-driven discoveries and autonomous robotics. These new approaches could accelerate the discovery of long-lasting and efficient catalysts for future energy conversion and the decarbonisation of the chemical industry. A recent article by Dr Prashanth Menezes and his team in the renowned journal Angewandte Chemie provides an overview of this research.
  • Imaging Ellipsometry for Process Control of Thin-Film Devices
    Science Highlight
    22.05.2026
    Imaging Ellipsometry for Process Control of Thin-Film Devices
    A German–Israeli research team led by Dr. Andreas Furchner has demonstrated how imaging ellipsometry enables non-destructive characterisation and quality control of microstructured MXene thin films during device fabrication. The authors used two complementary ellipsometry approaches for precise, multi-scale access to key material properties. The work positions imaging ellipsometry as a powerful platform for monitoring thin-film uniformity, device integrity, and functionality throughout processing, including critical lithographic steps.  The study was published in Applied Physics Letters and selected as an Editor’s Pick.