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Nickel-substituted polyoxometalate-CdS single-cluster photocatalysts for efficient plastic waste degradation coupled with H 2 production

Ukrainian Antarctic Journal 2025 14 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Shen‐Yue Xu, Ping Wang, Bowen Zhang, Cheng Wang, Jingxiang Low, В. К. Иванов, Zhiming Zhang

Summary

Researchers developed nickel-substituted polyoxometalate-CdS photocatalysts that simultaneously degrade polylactic acid (PLA) plastic waste and produce hydrogen gas under light irradiation, achieving approximately 160-fold greater activity than pristine CdS. The study identified pyruvate as a valuable chemical byproduct of the plastic degradation reaction, demonstrating both the environmental and economic viability of photocatalytic plastic waste conversion.

Polymers

Photocatalytic plastic waste degradation represents a pivotal strategy for mitigating global plastic pollution and fostering resource-efficient utilization. Yet, the simultaneous consumption of the photogenerated electrons during the photocatalytic plastic degradation remains challenging. Herein, we employed a facile impregnation method to uniformly disperse various Ni-substituted polyoxometalates (Ni-POMs) on CdS nanospheres, resulting in a series of POM-CdS single cluster catalysts (Ni-POM@CdS). Among these samples, Ni9@CdS-10 exhibits exceptional synergistic photo-redox performance, achieving a high H2 yield of 22.29 mmol gcat−1, along with an exceptional photocatalytic polylactic acid (PLA) plastic waste degradation under 10 h irradiation. This performance represents ~160-fold enhancement in catalytic activity compared to pristine CdS. More importantly, the pyruvate, a versatile and valuable chemical, is found to be the by-product of the photocatalytic plastic waste degradation with a yield of 19.01 mmol gcat-1, implying the high economic viability of this process. Combining various advanced characterization and materials simulation results, it is discovered that the Ni9@CdS-10 follows a charge-transfer-mediated reaction mechanism in photocatalytic plastic degradation, where the electron-sponge Ni9 efficiently extracts photogenerated electrons from CdS to promote H2 evolution, while simultaneously facilitates hole-dominated substrate oxidation for plastic degradation. This work provides a novel insights into the development of photocatalytic plastic wastes degradation using nickel-substituted POM catalysts, and establishes a practical pathway for the converting plastic waste into fuels and chemicals.

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