Advanced LDHs Derived Photocatalyst with Enhanced Charge Separation for Sustainable Environmental Remediation
Abstract
The discharge of highly contaminated wastewater effluent, particularly from industries such as textiles, pharmaceuticals, and tanneries, into ecology poses a crucial threat to biosphere. Environmental protection demands wastewater treatment that eliminate hazardous industrial dyes before discharge through the use of sustainable technologies. Layered Double Hydroxides (LDHs) emerged as a 2D anionic class of clay exhibiting adjustable composition with broad surface areas and remarkable ion-exchange capabilities demonstrating them as a potential photocatalyst for wastewater remediation. This research proposes a facile coprecipitation method followed by wet impregnation to develop a novel GO/TiO2-ZnAl LDH photocatalyst to efficiently degrade dyes. 10% GO loading onto the TiO2ZnAl LDH has demonstrated a notable operational activity which led to the effective degradation of Congo Red (CR) dye under visible light illumination. The ternary composite displayed a degradation efficiency of 91% when a catalyst dosage of 0.5 g was loaded to degrade 50 ppm of the dye solution within 5 h under visible light. The optimal addition of graphene oxide (GO) to TiO2/ZnAl-LDH matrix led to superior photocatalytic performance when compared with TiO2/ZnAl-LDH, ZnAl-LDH, GO, and TiO2Nps. The resultant enhanced photocatalytic performance can be attributed to GO's high electrical conductivity and large surface area that leads to improved charge carrier separation and minimized electron-hole recombination. The material's structural, morphological, and optical features were analyzed using anticipated techniques such as SEM, XRD, FTITR, UV-Vis, Raman, and Photoluminescence spectroscopy. This study suggests a flexible strategy for effectual removal of CR pollutant, stimulating industrial textile wastewater, using an effective ternary photocatalyst.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Advances in Sustainable Catalysis: from Materials to Energy and Environmental Applications
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