0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Remediation Sign in to save

Peroxymonosulfate enhanced photocatalytic degradation of organic dye by metal-free TpTt-COF under visible light irradiation

Scientific Reports 2024 16 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Nong Xu, Kaixuan Liu, Qiao Liu, Qing Wang, Anzheng Zhu, Long Fan

Summary

Researchers developed a metal-free, visible-light-activated photocatalyst called TpTt-COF that, when combined with a chemical oxidant (peroxymonosulfate), degrades organic dye pollutants 13.9 times faster than a comparable carbon-based material. The catalyst remained 83% effective after five reuse cycles, making it a promising candidate for treating chemical contaminants in water.

Recently, the activation of persulfate (PDS) by non-metallic photocatalysts under visible light has attracted significant interest in applications in environmental remediation. This study presents a pioneering investigation into the combined application of the TpTt-COF and PMS for visible light degradation of organic dyes. Synthesized orange TpTt-COF monomers exhibit exceptional crystallinity, a 2D structure, and notable stability in harsh conditions. The broad visible light absorption around a wavelength of 708 nm. The TpTt-COF emerges as a promising candidate for photocatalytic dye degradation. The study addresses high charge recombination in the TpTt-COF, highlighting the crucial role of its electron donor and acceptor for the PMS activation. Comparative analyses against traditional photocatalytic materials, such as the metal-free carbon-based material g-C3N4 and transition metal-containing TiO2, demonstrate TpTt-COF's superior performance, generating diverse free radicals. In simulated experiments, the TpTt-COF's degradation rate surpasses PMS-combined g-C3N4 by 13.9 times. and 1.6 times higher than the TpTt-COF alone. Remarkably, the TpTt-COF maintains high activity under harsh environments. Investigations into the degradation mechanism and the TpTt-COF's reusability reveal its efficiency and stability. Under visible light, TpTt-COF facilitates efficient electron-hole separation. Combining the TpTt-COF with PMS produces various radicals, ensuring effective separation and a synergistic effect. Radical quenching experiments confirm the pivotal role of O2-· radicals, while ·OH and SO4-· radicals intensify the degradation. After five cycles, TpTt-COF maintains an impressive 83.2% degradation efficiency. This study introduces an efficient photocatalytic system mediated by PMS and valuable insights into governing mechanisms for organic pollutant degradation in water environments.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Photocatalytic efficiency of bentonite-TQD via recycling and photodegradation of organic pollutants and industrial wastewater

Scientists created a new material that uses sunlight to break down toxic dyes from clothing factories in dirty water. This clay-based cleaner removed 93% of harmful dye pollution in just one hour and can be reused multiple times, making it cheaper than current methods. This matters because textile factory waste often contaminates drinking water sources, and this technology could help make that water safer for communities near manufacturing areas.

Article Tier 2

A Review on Photocatalysis Used For Wastewater Treatment: Dye Degradation

Researchers reviewed metal oxide-based photocatalysts — materials that use light to break down pollutants — for treating dye-contaminated wastewater, highlighting how rare-earth doping and nanocomposite design can overcome the limitations of standard titanium dioxide catalysts and improve degradation efficiency under visible light.

Article Tier 2

The Fabrication and Property Characterization of a Ho2YSbO7/Bi2MoO6 Heterojunction Photocatalyst and the Application of the Photodegradation of Diuron under Visible Light Irradiation

Researchers created a new photocatalytic material by combining two metal oxide compounds and tested its ability to break down diuron, a widely used herbicide and water pollutant, under visible light. The composite material showed significantly better pollutant degradation performance than either component alone. The study presents a potential approach for using sunlight-driven catalysts to remove persistent chemical contaminants from water.

Article Tier 2

Effective degradation of synthetic micropollutants and real textile wastewater via a visible light-activated persulfate system using novel spinach leaf-derived biochar

Researchers created a novel biochar from spinach leaves and used it to activate persulfate for degrading methylene blue dye under visible light conditions. The system achieved over 83% degradation efficiency and showed promise for treating real textile wastewater, demonstrating a sustainable approach to removing organic pollutants from contaminated water.

Article Tier 2

RSM approach for process optimization of the photodegradation of congo red by a novel NiCo2S4/chitosan photocatalyst

Researchers synthesized a new photocatalyst by combining nickel-cobalt sulfide with chitosan — a natural compound derived from shellfish — and used it to break down a common industrial dye using visible light, achieving over 93% degradation in one hour. The catalyst remained effective through four repeated uses, pointing to a practical, low-energy approach for treating dye-contaminated wastewater.

Share this paper