Abstract
Water contamination by hazardous organic pollutants poses an extreme threat to the environment and globally endangers aquatic life and human health. Hence, the removal of toxic organic effluents from water sources is necessary to ensure a healthy green environment. To this end, a new class of emerging, visible-light-driven Zn- and Ni-based ternary metal-selenide (Zn1-xNixSe) nanophotocatalysts, with tunable nanostructures via regulation of the stoichiometric ratios of Zn and Ni, were synthesized for efficient water purification by a facile one-pot hydrothermal process. These catalysts exhibit outstanding porous properties, with large surface areas and average particle sizes of around 80 ± 10 nm. The as-prepared ternary Zn1-xNixSe catalysts enable improved optical properties, intrinsic conductivity, bandgap reductions, and large numbers of active sites compared with pristine materials, thereby exhibiting outstanding degradation properties against various dye molecules, including Congo red, methyl orange, and chrome-IV upon visible light irradiation. The improved photodegradation capabilities of the Zn1-xNixSe catalysts may be attributed to the synergistic combinations of Zn and Ni selenides, which in turn minimize the recombination rates of the photogenerated carriers compared to their individual constituents. These findings clearly demonstrate that the proposed ternary Zn1-xNixSe catalysts could be potentially used to remove toxic organic contaminants from industrial wastewater.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 111587 |
| Journal | Environmental Research |
| Volume | 201 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Oct 2021 |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being
Keywords
- Nanoporous
- Organic dye molecules
- Photodegradation
- Wastewater treatment
- Zinc-nickel selenide
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