Facile Construction of All-Solid-State Z-Scheme g-CN/TiO Thin Film for the Efficient Visible-Light Degradation of Organic Pollutant.

Nanomaterials (Basel)

College of Materials and Chemistry, China Jiliang University, 258 Xueyuan Street, Xiasha Higher Education District, Hangzhou 310018, China.

Published: March 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The growing problem of dye and antibiotic contamination in water is difficult to manage with traditional sewage treatment methods.
  • A novel solution, semiconductor photocatalysis, particularly using TiO, has significant potential, but still faces challenges like poor visible-light response and difficulty in recovering powder catalysts.
  • This research focused on creating a stable thin-film photocatalyst (g-CN/TiO heterojunction) on glass that effectively degrades pollutants like rhodamine B and tetracycline hydrochloride, achieving optimal results with five layers and proposing a Z-scheme mechanism for photodegradation.

Article Abstract

The increasing discharge of dyes and antibiotic pollutants in water has brought serious environmental problems. However, it is difficult to remove such pollutants effectively by traditional sewage treatment technologies. Semiconductor photocatalysis is a new environment-friendly technique and is widely used in aqueous pollution control. TiO is one of the most investigated photocatalysts; however, it still faces the main drawbacks of a poor visible-light response and a low charge-separation efficiency. Moreover, powder photocatalyst is difficult to be recovered, which is another obstacle limiting the practical application. In this article, g-CN/TiO heterojunction is simply immobilized on a glass substrate to form an all-solid-state Z-scheme heterojunction. The obtained thin-film photocatalyst was characterized and applied in the visible-light photodegradation of colored rhodamine B and tetracycline hydrochloride. The photocatalytic performance is related to the deposited layers, and the sample with five layers shows the best photocatalytic efficiency. The thin-film photocatalyst is easy to be recovered with stability. The active component responsible for the photodegradation is identified and a Z-scheme mechanism is proposed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7221626PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano10040600DOI Listing

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