4.8 Review

Photocatalytic organic pollutants degradation in metal-organic frameworks

Journal

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Volume 7, Issue 9, Pages 2831-2867

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c4ee01299b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [21271015, 21322601]
  2. Program for New Century Excellent Talents in University [NCET-13-0647]
  3. Beijing Municipal Natural Science Foundation [2132013]
  4. Beijing Natural Science Foundation AMP
  5. Scientific Research Key Program of Beijing Municipal Commission of Education [KZ201410016018]
  6. Training Program Foundation for the Beijing Municipal Excellent Talents [2013D005017000004]
  7. Importation AMP
  8. Development of High-Caliber Talents Project of Beijing Municipal Institutions [CITCD201404076]
  9. China Postdoctoral Science of Foundation [2013M540831]
  10. Academic Innovation Team of BUCEA

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Efficient removal of organic pollutants from wastewater has become a hot research topic due to its ecological and environmental importance. Traditional water treatment methods such as adsorption, coagulation, and membrane separation suffer from high operating costs, and even generate secondary pollutants. Photocatalysis on semiconductor catalysts (TiO2, ZnO, Fe2O3, CdS, GaP, and ZnS) has demonstrated efficiency in degrading a wide range of organic pollutants into biodegradable or less toxic organic compounds, as well as inorganic CO2, H2O, NO3-, PO43-, and halide ions. However, the difficult post-separation, easy agglomeration, and low solar energy conversion efficiency of these inorganic catalysts limit their large scale applications. Exploitation of new catalysts has been attracting great attention in the related research communities. In the past two decades, a class of newly-developed inorganic-organic hybrid porous materials, namely metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) has generated rapid development due to their versatile applications such as in catalysis and separation. Recent research has showed that these materials, acting as catalysts, are quite effective in the photocatalytic degradation of organic pollutants. This review highlights research progress in the application of MOFs in this area. The reported examples are collected and analyzed; and the reaction mechanism, the influence of various factors on the catalytic performance, the involved challenges, and the prospect are discussed and estimated. It is clear that MOFs have a bright future in photocatalysis for pollutant degradation.

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