4.7 Article

Wet-chemical synthesis of nanostructured Ce-doped mixed metal ferrites for the effective removal of azo dyes from industrial discharges

Journal

CERAMICS INTERNATIONAL
Volume 48, Issue 8, Pages 11858-11868

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ceramint.2022.01.057

Keywords

Congo-Red; Nanoparticles; Micro-emulsion; Rare-earth; Mixed-ferrite

Funding

  1. Taif Researchers Supporting Project, Taif University, Taif, Saudi Arabia [TURSP-2020/46]
  2. American University in Cairo (AUC) [SSE-CHEM-S.Z.-FY19-FY20-FY21-RG (1-19)]

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Photocatalysis is a cost-effective and environmentally friendly technique for addressing water pollution caused by industrialization. In this study, Ce-doped cobalt/nickel mixed metal ferrite materials were synthesized using the microemulsion method. The C-9@CNMF material exhibited better mineralization of the CR dye, faster mineralization rate, and excellent recyclability and photo-corrosion resistance. These superior photocatalytic properties are attributed to the nanoarchitecture, larger specific surface area, tunable bandgap, and effective charge separation characteristics of the C-9@CNMF sample.
Today, photocatalysis is the most cost-effective and ecologically beneficial technique for tackling the growing problem of water pollution caused by rapid industrialization. The fabrication of a new photocatalyst with quicker charge transport, superior charge separation, narrow bandgap energy, reduced electron-hole pair recombination rate, and good light-harvesting characteristics is a major challenge for materials researchers. So herein, we used the microemulsion method to synthesize Ce-doped (rare-earth metal) cobalt/nickel mixed metal ferrite (CX@CNMF, X = 0%, 3%, 6%, 9%, 12%, and 15%). Application studies revealed that C-9@CNMF material mineralizes the Congo red (CR) dye to a greater extent than that of C-0@CNMF under visible light irradiation. At the completion of the photodegradation reaction, nanostructured C-9@CNMF material completely mineralized CRdye, whereas only 45.11%, 49.6%, and 73.3% of the CR-dye was removed by C-0@CNMF, C-3@CNMF, and C15@CNMF nanoparticles. The kinetic tests showed that C-9@CNMF material mineralized the CR-dye at a rate (k = 0.0336 min(-1)) that is approximately 6.72 times quicker than that of the C-0@CNMF sample (0.0050 min(-1)). Aside from that, the C-9@CNMF material showed exceptional recyclability and photo-corrosion resistance, losing just 7.5% of its photocatalytic activity after five cycles of CR-dye degradation. The dominating photocatalytic performance of the C-9@CNMF sample is mainly attributed to its nanoarchitecture (44.8 nm), larger specific surface area (57.6 m2/g), tunable bandgap (2.13 eV), and effective charge separation characteristics.

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