Visible light-driven dye degradation by magnetic cobalt-doped zinc oxide/iron oxide photocatalyst

Zinc oxide (ZnO) serves as a photocatalyst, but it faces challenges due to its high band gap energy, limiting photoactivation to ultraviolet irradiation and rendering it scarcely recoverable after degradation. This work focuses on enhancing the photocatalytic efficiency of ZnO through cobalt doping...

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Veröffentlicht in:Next materials 2024-01, Vol.2, p.100074, Article 100074
Hauptverfasser: Chong, Ceng Yik, Sum, Jing Yao, Lai, Li Sze, Toh, Pey Yi, Chang, Zhen Hong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Zinc oxide (ZnO) serves as a photocatalyst, but it faces challenges due to its high band gap energy, limiting photoactivation to ultraviolet irradiation and rendering it scarcely recoverable after degradation. This work focuses on enhancing the photocatalytic efficiency of ZnO through cobalt doping and immobilization onto magnetic iron oxide (Fe3O4) via co-precipitation. The concentration of the cobalt precursor (0–10 mol %) and the molar ratio between Co–ZnO and Fe3O4 (5:1–15:1) were varied to achieve the optimal degradation efficiency and magnetic properties. Characterization tools such as the scanning electron microscope (SEM), energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDX), attenuated total reflectance – Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR), and X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD) were utilized to evaluate the effect of cobalt doping on the physicochemical properties of the developed photocatalyst. Tauc plots indicated that 5 mol % Co–ZnO (Co5–ZnO) had the smallest band gap energy (2.79 eV), resulting in the highest photodegradation of methylene blue (88.72 %), compared to pristine ZnO (74.88 %) with a band gap energy of 3.39 eV. Co–ZnO/Fe3O4 showed a slight degradation efficiency decline, reaching a minimum of 84.53 % for the 5:1 molar ratio. These photocatalysts exhibited magnetic properties, with recovery efficiency ranging between 69.8 % and 72 %. Active radicals trapping experiments confirmed the involvement of holes, hydroxyl, and superoxide radicals in the degradation process, with superoxide radicals playing the most significant roles. In summary, this study successfully demonstrated that the synthesized Co–ZnO photocatalysts gained visible light sensitivity, and the incorporation of Fe3O4 imparted magnetic separability to the composite, thereby facilitating photocatalyst recovery. [Display omitted] •Enhanced photocatalytic degradation under visible light irradiation through cobalt doping of ZnO.•Development of a magnetic recoverable core-shell photocatalyst by co-precipitating Co-ZnO onto magnetic Fe3O4.•Demonstration of energy band gap reduction resulting from cobalt doping using the Tauc plot.•Elucidation of photocatalytic degradation mechanism based on active radical trapping experiments.•Real-time monitoring of the magnetophoresis of the core-shell Co-ZnO/Fe3O4 in a magnetic field.
ISSN:2949-8228
2949-8228
DOI:10.1016/j.nxmate.2023.100074