A silver sulfide (AgS) semiconductor photocatalyst film has been successfully synthesized using a solution casting method. To produce the photocatalyst films, two types of AgS powder were used: a commercialized and synthesized powder. For the commercialized powder (CF/comAgS), the AgS underwent a rarefaction process to reduce its crystallite size from 52 nm to 10 nm, followed by incorporation into microcrystalline cellulose using a solution casting method under the presence of an alkaline/urea solution. A similar process was applied to the synthesized AgS powder (CF/syntAgS), resulting from the co-precipitation process of silver nitrate (AgNO) and thiourea. The prepared photocatalyst films and their photocatalytic efficiency were characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and UV-visible spectroscopy (UV-Vis). The results showed that the incorporation of the AgS powder into the cellulose films could reduce the peak intensity of the oxygen-containing functional group, which indicated the formation of a composite film. The study of the crystal structure confirmed that all of the as-prepared samples featured a monoclinic acanthite AgS structure with space group P/C. It was found that the degradation rate of the methylene blue dye reached 100% within 2 h under sunlight exposure when using CF/comAgS and 98.6% for the CF/syntAgS photocatalyst film, and only 48.1% for the bare AgS powder. For the non-exposure sunlight samples, the degradation rate of only 33-35% indicated the importance of the semiconductor near-infrared (NIR) AgS photocatalyst used.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9822198 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16010437 | DOI Listing |
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