Cellulose-based materials in tailoring a novel defective titanium‑carbon‑phosphorus hybrid composites for highly efficient photocatalytic activity.

Int J Biol Macromol

UGR-Carbon, Materiales Polifuncionales Basados en Carbono, Departamento de Química Inorgánica, Facultad de Ciencias - Unidad de Excelencia Química Aplicada a Biomedicina y Medioambiente Universidad de Granada (UEQ-UGR), 18071 Granada, Spain.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Black titania has been explored as a photocatalyst, but this study introduces a novel titanium-carbon-phosphorous (TCPH) hybrid nanocomposite that significantly enhances photocatalytic performance.
  • The TCPH effectively degraded methyl orange (MO) dye, demonstrating superior capabilities compared to traditional titanium-cellulose-phosphorous (TCeP) and titanium-carbon-phosphorous (TCPN) composites, especially under optimal conditions.
  • Key properties, such as the presence of Ti and oxygen vacancies, increased surface area, and a unique core-shell structure, contribute to enhanced charge transport and stability over multiple cycles, making TCPH a promising candidate for industrial applications like water treatment and CO reduction.

Article Abstract

Until now, black titania has attracted much interest as a potential photocatalyst. In this contribution, we report the first demonstration of the effective strategy to fundamentally improve the photocatalytic performance using a novel sustainable defective titanium‑carbon-phosphorous (TCPH) hybrid nanocomposite. The prepared TCPH was used for photocatalytic degradation of the main organic pollutants, which is methyl orange (MO) dye. The physico-chemical properties of as-prepared samples were characterized by various techniques to observe the transformations after carbonization and the interaction between different composite phases. The existence of Ti and oxygen vacancies at the surface, and a notable increase in surface area, are all demonstrated by TCPH, together with the distinct core-shell structure. These unique properties exhibit excellent photocatalytic performance due to the boosted charge transport and separation. The highest degradation efficiency of methyl orange (MO) was attained in the case of TCPH when compared with titanium-cellulose-phosphorous (TCeP) and titanium‑carbon-phosphorous (TCPN). Accordingly, the highest degradation efficiency was achieved by applying the optimal operational conditions of 1 g/L of TCPH catalyst, 10 mg/L of MO, pH of 7 and the temperature at 25 ± 3 °C after 3 min under LED lamp (365 nm) with light intensity 100 mW/cm. The degradation mechanism was investigated, and the trapping tests showed the dominance of hydroxyl radicals in the degradation of MO. TCPH showed high stability under a long period of operation in five consecutive cycles, which renders the highly promising on an industrial scale. The fabrication of highly active defective titanium‑carbon-phosphorous opens new opportunities in various areas, including water splitting, and CO reduction.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.132304DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

photocatalytic performance
8
defective titanium‑carbon-phosphorous
8
methyl orange
8
highest degradation
8
degradation efficiency
8
tcph
6
degradation
5
cellulose-based materials
4
materials tailoring
4
tailoring novel
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!