4.7 Review

Boron carbon nitride nanosheets in water and wastewater treatment: A critical review

Journal

DESALINATION
Volume 533, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.desal.2022.115782

Keywords

Adsorption; Ammonia production; Boron carbon nitride; Electrochemical reduction; Photocatalyst

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korea government (MSIT) [NRF-2020R1F1A1076312]

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The availability and accessibility of clean and secure water supplies are pressing global issues. Wastewater treatment and reuse using BCN nanosheets offer viable alternatives to alleviate water constraints. BCN materials have shown great potential in various applications such as water treatment, catalysts, and electrical devices.
The availability and accessibility of clean and secure water supplies are pressing technological and scientific issues worldwide. As a result of global water constraints, wastewater treatment and reuse are being evaluated as feasible alternatives to fresh water for agricultural irrigation and domestic and industrial purposes. Boron carbon nitride (BCN) nanosheets have been studied intensively in the last decade in batteries, biosensors, and capacitors, and for use as catalysts, and they have recently been used in wastewater treatment. BCN materials, along with their synthesis processes, characteristics, and application areas in water and wastewater treatment, are discussed thoroughly in this paper. Additionally, synthesis processes for ternary BCN compounds, including chemical vapor deposition, ion beam-aided deposition, magnetron sputtering, and pulsed laser deposition, are described. BCN materials have also been explored because of their flexible electrical features, excellent mechanical strength, outstanding unreactivity, and significant stability, which make them appropriate for a range of severe environment applications. Thus, the use of BCN materials as photocatalysts and adsorbents and in electrochemical reduction and capacitive deionization are also discussed thoroughly. The highest ammonia production of 172,226.5 mu g/h.mg.cat and faradic efficiency of 95.3% have been obtained using the BCN@Cu/CNT catalyst, whereas the ammonia production and FE values for metal-free BCN are 7.75 mu g/h.mg.cat and 13.8%. Moreover, the maximum attained adsorption capacities of BCN nanosheets for Pb(2+ )and Hg2+ are 210 and 625 mg/g, respectively. Overall, this review indicates that essential work on BCN nanosheets is still needed. Future research should focus on the development of BCN nanostructures to encourage multidisciplinary research.

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