In addition to environmental impacts, excess use of nitrogen fertilizers can also stunt the growth of crops, defeating their purpose of improving production. By simultaneously producing ammonia and monitoring nitrogen levels, this new technology improves crop growth by helping plants take in and use nitrogen more efficiently.

So-called smart farming is a growing research area. World leaders are grappling with how to produce enough food for the global population expected to increase by more than 2 billion people by 2050 with tight land availability and the need to minimize harmful emissions.

Farming isn’t the only industry that creates significant nitrogen pollution. Industrial and municipal wastewater often features high levels of nitrate because of production of electronics, food processing, textile manufacturing and more.

“We need to feed our growing population, but we also need to protect our water and air,” Yu said. “Finding ways to capture and recycle nitrate-heavy wastewater could have tremendous benefits across the board.”

The research builds on previous agricultural breakthroughs from Yu and his team, including the creation of self-watering soil and an innovative way to produce urea, another key element in fertilizers. The researchers’ next step will be to infuse artificial intelligence into this farming platform. By doing that, they aim to expand the range of crops they can work on and further scale up fertilizing operations.

This project is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Basic Energy Sciences Office, the Norman Hackerman Award in Chemical Research from the Welch Foundation and the Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award. The project team includes from UT Austin’s Materials Science and Engineering program Zhiwei Fang and Panpan Li (who is also a part of the College of Materials Science and Engineering at Sichuan University in China); Ling Liao and Gehong Su of Sichuan Agricultural University’s College of Horticulture and College of Science; and Zhaoyu Jin of the University of Electronic Science and Technology in China.