4.6 Article

Core/Shell Ag/SnO2 Nanowires for Visible Light Photocatalysis

Journal

CATALYSTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/catal12010030

Keywords

AgNWs; SnO2; silver nanowires; core-shell nanostructures; photocatalytic activity; visible-light photocatalysis

Funding

  1. National Science Centre, Poland [2018/29/B/ST8/02016]

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This study introduces core/shell Ag/SnO2 nanowires as a new photocatalyst for the rapid degradation of organic compounds under visible light. The efficient degradation process is attributed to the unique properties of Ag/SnO2 nanowires, including surface plasmon resonance effects and charge separations preventing recombination of electron-hole pairs. These properties make Ag/SnO2 nanowires suitable for designing efficient and fast photodegradation systems for organic pollutants under solar light.
This study presents core/shell Ag/SnO2 nanowires (Ag/SnO(2)NWs) as a new photocatalyst for the rapid degradation of organic compounds by the light from the visible range. AgNWs after coating with a SnO2 shell change optical properties and, due to red shift of the absorbance maxima of the longitudinal and transverse surface plasmon resonance (SPR), modes can be excited by the light from the visible light region. Rhodamine B and malachite green were respectively selected as a model organic dye and toxic one that are present in the environment to study the photodegradation process with a novel one-dimensional metal/semiconductor Ag/SnO(2)NWs photocatalyst. The degradation was investigated by studying time-dependent UV/Vis absorption of the dye solution, which showed a fast degradation process due to the presence of Ag/SnO(2)NWs photocatalyst. The rhodamine B and malachite green degraded after 90 and 40 min, respectively, under irradiation at the wavelength of 450 nm. The efficient photocatalytic process is attributed to two phenomenon surface plasmon resonance effects of AgNWs, which allowed light absorption from the visible range, and charge separations on the Ag core and SnO2 shell interface of the nanowires which prevents recombination of photogenerated electron-hole pairs. The presented properties of Ag/SnO(2)NWs can be used for designing efficient and fast photodegradation systems to remove organic pollutants under solar light without applying any external sources of irradiation.

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