4.6 Article

Preparation of Porous Ellipsoidal Bismuth Oxyhalide Microspheres and Their Photocatalytic Performances

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15176035

Keywords

bismuth oxyhalides; photocatalytic degradation; holes; microspheres

Funding

  1. open fund program of the National Engineering Laboratory for Ultra High Voltage Engineering Technology (Kunming, Guangzhou) [9500002020030101YJZX00095]
  2. National Engineering Laboratory for Ultra High Voltage Engineering Technology (Kunming, Guangzhou)

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Well-dispersed and uniform porous ellipsoidal-shaped bismuth oxyhalides microspheres were obtained by a solvothermal method, showing promising applications in photocatalytic degradation of organic pollutants.
Well-dispersed and uniform porous ellipsoidal-shaped bismuth oxyhalides (nominal composition: 80%BiOCl/20%BiOI) microspheres were obtained by a facile solvothermal method, in which process the use of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) as template agent was found to be crucial. At 150 degrees C, elliptical porous particles with a particle size of 0.79 mu m were formed. Instead of forming solid solutions, the study of X-ray diffraction (XRD) and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) shows that the prepared 80%BiOCl/20%BiOI microspheres are composite of BiOCl and BiOI in nature and the obtained crystallite size is about 5.6 nm. The optical bandgap of 80%BiOCl/20%BiOI was measured to be 2.93 eV, which is between the bandgap values of BiOCl and BiOI. The 80%BiOCl/20%BiOI microspheres were able to decompose various organic dyes (rhodamine B-RhB, methyl orange-MO, methylene blue-MB, methyl violet-MV) under an illuminated condition with the degradation rate in the order of RhB > MB > MV > MO, and 98% of RhB can be degraded in 90 min. Radical scavenger tests showed that photogenerated holes are the main active species for the photocatalytic decomposition of all of the tested organic dyes. Our results show that the obtained porous ellipsoidal-shaped 80%BiOCl/20%BiOI microspheres are promising for the degradation of various organic pollutants under the illumination of visible light.

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