4.4 Article

Tuning the photocatalytic activity of ZnO nanoparticles by the annihilation of intrinsic defects provoked by the thermal annealing

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOPARTICLE RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11051-022-05421-7

Keywords

ZnO nanoparticles; Photocatalytic activity; ZnO exciton emission peak; Thermal annealing; Photodegradation of methylene blue; Nanostructured catalysts

Funding

  1. CONCYTEC-PROCIENCIA [07-2019-FONDECYT-BM-INC. INV, E038-01]
  2. Brazilian agency CNPq [303182/2020-2]
  3. Brazilian agency FAPDF [00193-00000151/2019-20]
  4. CNPq

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The current study synthesized ZnO nanoparticles using the polymeric precursor technique and adjusted their physical properties through annealing. UV-Vis spectroscopy showed a decrease in the optical band gap of the nanoparticles with increasing annealing temperature. The photocatalytic activity of the nanoparticles against methylene blue dye increased with annealing temperature, reaching a maximum at 700°C.
In the current study describes the synthesis, characterization, and photocatalytic activity (PCA) of ZnO nanoparticles (NPs) synthesized via the polymeric precursor technique in the first step, following annealing ranging from 500 to 900 degrees C in a second step. X-ray diffraction data analysis confirms the formation of the wurtzite crystal structure in the as-prepared and thermally annealed samples. To adjust the crystallite mean size and physical properties, thermal annealing procedures in atmospheric air are used. The UV-Vis spectroscopy studies show that the optical band gap of the as-fabricated ZnO NPs decreases monotonically, from similar to 3.4 eV to similar to 3.1 eV, as the annealing temperature increases. The PCA of the ZnO NPs against methylene blue dye tests revealed an increase in efficiency as the annealing temperature increases from 500 degrees C, reaching a maximum performance for the sample annealed at 700 degrees C. Above that annealing temperature, the efficiency tends to slightly decrease. Our findings suggest that the PCA tests of the ZnO NPs do not show a straightforward dependence on the NPs' size, but it seems to be correlated with the density of defects, such as oxygen vacancies, which are modulated by the annealing temperature. In addition, thermoluminescence (TL) glow curves exhibit a well-defined peak located at similar to 622 K for the as-prepared ZnO NPs. The TL peak intensity shows a decreasing trend with the annealing temperature up to similar to 700 degrees C. This result was correlated with the modulation of charge traps as the annealing temperature is increased. It means, the TL peak intensity is directly related to the amount of trapped charges (electrons and holes); therefore, a more intense TL peak suggests less photogenerated charge available for the catalytic activity, leading to a marked reduction of the PCA.

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