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Add as preferred source A single-atom platinum catalyst lights ammonia at 200 °C and keeps it burning steadily at 1,100 °C with low NOx, generating high-grade, carbon-free heat for steel, cement and chemicals. Credit: College of Design and Engineering at NUS A single-atom platinum catalyst lights ammonia at 200 °C and keeps it burning steadily at 1,100 °C with low NOx, generating high-grade, carbon-free heat for steel, cement and chemicals.

Ammonia is a tempting fuel for the world's hottest jobs. It can be made from air, water and renewable electricity, stored as a liquid and shipped using know-how industry already has.

However, the snag is that it is stubborn to ignite, burns sluggishly and tends to spew nitrogen oxides (NOx) when pushed to high temperatures. That mix has kept heavy industry—where high-grade heat is non-negotiable—tethered to fossil fuels.

CDE researchers have now shown that design at the atomic scale can change the equation. In work published in Joule, a team led by Professor Yan Ning from the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and Assistant Professor He Qian from the Department of Materials Science and Engineering designed a catalyst that gets ammonia burning just above 200°C and sustains clean combustion at 1,100°C. Importantly, it converts the fuel completely into nitrogen and water, with only trace amounts of NOx. This means that industries could one day use ammonia to generate high-grade heat without producing carbon dioxide or harmful exhaust gases.

Industrial furnaces and reactors need intense, controllable heat delivered on demand. In principle, ammonia can provide that without carbon. But in practice, it is tricky. Ammonia's "flammability window" is narrow—it only burns cleanly in a tight range of fuel–air mixes. In addition, the "light-off" temperature—the point where it starts burning readily—is high, and flames can become unstable. When operators raise temperature to keep the flame alive, NOx usually climbs.

"Heavy industry needs high-quality heat, not just a clean exhaust," says Asst Prof He. "We set out to kill two birds with one stone: make ammonia easier to ignite and keep NOx low when you run it hot."

The team's approach, known as high-temperature catalytic ammonia combustion, uses a surface catalyst to help ammonia react with oxygen more easily. The tricky part is finding a material that can not only trigger combustion early, but also withstand the punishing temperatures needed for industrial heat.

The researchers found their answer in a material that distributes individual platinum atoms—each one acting as a tiny reaction site—across a tough support made from alumina strengthened with zirconia. This design prevents the metal atoms from clumping together under heat and helps the catalyst maintain its structure at over 1000°C.

When tested in the lab, the catalyst ignited ammonia at around 215°C—far lower than the 500°C or more usually needed—and kept it burning steadily at 1,100°C. Every molecule of ammonia was converted, with no unburned traces left behind and almost no NOx formation. The catalyst also grew stronger with use: after its first run, its performance improved and remained stable through repeated high-temperature cycles.

At lower temperatures, the single platinum atoms help ammonia molecules break apart and recombine with oxygen to form nitrogen and water, the cleanest possible outcome of combustion. At higher temperatures, the structure of the catalyst steers the reaction away from NOx formation. Advanced imaging confirmed that even after 80 hours of operation, the platinum atoms stayed dispersed and active, showing the thermal endurance of the catalyst.

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"What matters here is the design logic," says Prof Yan. "Pairing a heat-stable support with isolated metal atoms enables us to achieve both early ignition and resilience at extreme temperatures. The system naturally favors the formation of nitrogen over nitrogen oxides."

Asst Prof He adds, "Industries could retrofit their systems with minimal changes, gaining the benefits of clean heat without having to rebuild their plants from scratch."

The researchers' next step is to bring this concept closer to the factory floor. Supported by the NUS Centre for Hydrogen Innovations, the team is preparing for pilot-scale trials using facilities equipped for safe ammonia handling. They aim to test the catalyst in practical setups, such as industrial burners, gas turbines or high-temperature reactors, to see how it performs under real operating conditions.

"Ammonia has always held promise as a low-carbon fuel, but making it truly usable required solving a long-standing chemistry problem," says Du Yankun, first author of the paper. "Our catalyst shows that it is possible to unlock ammonia's energy cleanly and reliably. That brings us one step closer to carbon-free industrial heat."

Yankun Du et al, Single-atom catalysts enabled catalytic ammonia combustion at 1,100°C, Joule (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.joule.2025.102030

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A single-atom platinum catalyst enables ammonia to ignite at 215 °C and sustain combustion at 1,100 °C, producing high-grade, carbon-free heat with minimal NOx emissions. The catalyst maintains structural stability and activity under prolonged high temperatures, fully converting ammonia to nitrogen and water, offering a viable route for decarbonizing industrial heat processes.

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