4.7 Article

Tuning ZnO/GO p-n heterostructure with carbon interlayer supported on clay for visible-light catalysis: Removal of steroid estrogens from water

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 420, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2020.127668

Keywords

Zinc oxide; Graphene ox i d e; Estrogens; Visible light; Wastewater; Toxicity

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research
  2. Alexander Von Humboldt Foundation
  3. World Academy of Science-Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (TWAS-CNpq) [315710/20187]
  4. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo (FAPESP) [2018/16244-0]

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This study demonstrates the efficiency of a new visible-light p-n ZnO/GO heterostructured composite catalyst supported on clay with carbon interlayer for the removal of four steroid estrogens in water. The presence of carbon interlayer and graphene oxide were crucial for the visible-light efficiency of the photocatalyst, achieving >89% estrogen removal. Analysis confirmed the formation of hydroxyl radicals responsible for photodegradation of estrogens in the presence of the photocatalytic composite.
This study demonstrates the efficiency of a new visible-light p-n ZnO/GO heterostructured composite catalyst supported on clay with carbon interlayer. This photocatalyst was prepared via microwave assisted technique for the removal of four steroid estrogens in water: Estrone (E1), 17-beta-estradiol (E2), Estriol (E3) and the synthetic estrogen 17-alpha ethinylestradiol (EE2). The prepared catalyst was characterized by different techniques: FE-SEM, EDX, RAMAN, ATR-FTIR, XPS, BET, UV-VIS, and PL. Studies confirmed that the presence of carbon interlayer (from carica papaya seeds) and graphene oxide (GO) were important for the visible-light efficiency of the photocatalyst. In single solute systems, estrogen removal was >89% and as high as 98% and this was not significantly different in a competitive system. In real wastewater samples, efficiency was 63-78% estrogen removal. A reuse study suggested that the photocatalyst efficiency was slightly >80% after 3 reuse cycles. The presence of humic acid reduced the efficiency to >= 70% for all estrogens while the addition of 1% H2O2 raised photodegradation of estrogens to 100% in 10 min. However, using the chemical oxidation demand test, the actual oxidation level of steroid estrogens after photodegradation was 51-77% for the various steroid estrogens. Important reactive oxygen species responsible for photodegradation was hydroxyl radical (HO center dot) via superoxide radical (center dot O2-) and hole (h+) formation from the photocatalytic composite. Test with ceriodaphnia silvestrii suggests very mild toxicity from treated water which is below the acute level of these estrogens (LC50 = ca. 0.89 mg/L).

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