4.7 Article

Synergistic effect of doping and nanotechnology to fabricate highly efficient photocatalyst for environmental remediation

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLOYS AND COMPOUNDS
Volume 920, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jallcom.2022.165876

Keywords

Nanotechnology; Doping; Co-precipitation; Surfactant-assisted; Rhodamine B

Funding

  1. Deanship of Scientific Research at King Khalid University [2/6/43]

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Nanotechnology and metal-doping techniques were used to synthesize zinc-doped copper oxide (Zn0.4Co0.6O) photocatalyst with enhanced photocatalytic and antibacterial activities. The nanoarchitecture and modified electronic structure of the zinc-doped copper oxide sample resulted in increased photocatalytic activity and enhanced antibacterial activity.
Nanotechnology and metal-doping are two promising techniques to make semiconductive material-based photocatalysts with higher surface area and modulating electronic structure. Using the simple surfactant-assisted co-precipitation approach; we synthesized nanostructured Zn-doped CuO (Zn0.4Co 0.6 O) as a visible-light-driven catalyst for environmental remediation. The morphology, texture, crystal structure, phase, charge transport properties, and chemical constitution of the as-prepared materials were char-acterized through advanced physiochemical characterization. Using the Rhodamine B (RhB) dye and the bacteria Escherichia coli (E-coli), the photocatalytic and antibacterial activities of CuO and Zn-doped CuO were investigated and compared to evaluate the effect of the doping technique. Surfactant-assisted syn-thesized Zn-doped CuO samples demonstrated excellent photocatalytic practicability against Rhodamine B dye, with a mineralization efficiency of up to 92.89% within 70 min and a high pseudo-first-order kinetic constant (K) of 0.033 min-1. The photocurrent response of the Zn-doped CuO sample was about double that of the CuO sample, demonstrating that the nanoarchitecture and modified electronic structure of the Zn-doped CuO sample resulted in increased photocatalytic activity. Furthermore, the Zn-doped CuO photo-catalyst demonstrated enhanced antibacterial activity, killing E. coli bacteria by creating reactive oxygen species (ROS) that disrupt their important cellular processes and functions. Thus, our proposed Zn-doped CuO photocatalytic with faster degradation kinetics, good recyclability, and a lower electron-hole re-combination probability could be used for environmental remediation.(c) 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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