Issue 42, 2023

Plasma synthesis of oxygen vacancy-rich CuO/Cu2(OH)3NO3 heterostructure nanosheets for boosting degradation performance

Abstract

Defect regulation and the construction of a heterojunction structure are effective strategies to improve the catalytic activity of catalysts. In this work, the rapid conversion of CuO to Cu2(OH)3NO3 was achieved by fixing nitrogen in air as NO3 using dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) plasma. This innovative approach resulted in the successful synthesis of a CuO/Cu2(OH)3NO3 nanosheet heterostructure. Notably, the samples prepared using plasma exhibit thinner thickness and larger specific surface area. Importantly, oxygen vacancies are introduced, simultaneously forming heterojunction interfaces within the CuO/Cu2(OH)3NO3 structure. CuO/Cu2(OH)3NO3 using plasma effectively degraded 96% of methyl orange within 8 min in the dark. The degradation rate is 81 and 23 times that of CuO and Cu2(OH)3NO3 using hydrothermal methods, respectively. The high catalytic activity is attributed to the large specific surface area, the abundance of active sites, and the synergy between oxygen vacancies and the strong heterojunction interfacial interactions, which accelerate the transfer of electrons and the production of reactive oxygen species (˙O2 and ˙OH). The mechanism of plasma preparation was proposed on account of microstructure characterization and online mass spectroscopy, which indicated that gas etching, gas expansion, and the repulsive force of electrons play key roles in plasma exfoliation.

Graphical abstract: Plasma synthesis of oxygen vacancy-rich CuO/Cu2(OH)3NO3 heterostructure nanosheets for boosting degradation performance

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Aug 2023
Accepted
09 Oct 2023
First published
10 Oct 2023

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023,25, 29108-29119

Plasma synthesis of oxygen vacancy-rich CuO/Cu2(OH)3NO3 heterostructure nanosheets for boosting degradation performance

Z. Yang, X. Peng, J. Zheng and Z. Wang, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023, 25, 29108 DOI: 10.1039/D3CP03918H

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