BiFeO Nanoparticles: The "Holy-Grail" of Piezo-Photocatalysts?

Adv Mater

Université Paris-Saclay, CentraleSupélec, Laboratoire Structures, Propriétés et Modélisation des Solides, UMR CNRS 8580, Gif-sur-Yvette, 91190, France.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research highlights the use of piezoelectric catalysis, particularly with BiFeO nanoparticles, as an effective method for degrading pollutants like Rhodamine B (RhB), achieving high degradation rates.
  • These 60 nm-sized BiFeO nanoparticles achieve a remarkable 100% degradation of RhB in just 5 minutes when combined with sunlight, showcasing their potential for rapid environmental applications.
  • The BiFeO nanoparticles are embedded in a polymer matrix for improved stability and reusability, maintaining strong catalytic performance for various pollutants, thereby opening avenues for further research in water purification and other environmental processes.

Article Abstract

Recently, piezoelectric-based catalysis has been demonstrated to be an efficient means and promising alternative to sunlight-driven photocatalysis, where mechanical vibrations trigger redox reactions. Here, 60 nm-size BiFeO nanoparticles are shown to be very effective for piezo-degrading Rhodamine B (RhB) model dye with record degradation rate reaching 13 810 L mol  min , and even 41 750 L mol  min (i.e., 100% RhB degradation within 5 min) when piezocatalysis is synergistically combined with sunlight photocatalysis. These BiFeO piezocatalytic nanoparticles are also demonstrated to be versatile toward several dyes and pharmaceutical pollutants, with over 80% piezo-decomposition within 120 min. The maintained high piezoelectric coefficient combined with low dielectric constant, high-elastic modulus, and the nanosized shape make these BiFeO  nanoparticles extremely efficient piezocatalysts. To avoid subsequent secondary pollution and enable their reusability, the BiFeO nanoparticles are further embedded in a polymer P(VDF-TrFE) matrix. The as-designed flexible, chemically stable, and recyclable nanocomposites still keep remarkable piezocatalytic and piezo-photocatalytic performances (i.e., 92% and 100% RhB degradation, respectively, within 20 min). This work opens a new research avenue for BiFeO that is the model multiferroic and offers a new platform for water cleaning, as well as other applications such as water splitting, CO reduction, or surface purification.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202301841DOI Listing

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