Hierarchical TiO2 nanohorns/nanocrystalline diamond heterostructures for efficient methylene blue photodegradation
Abstract
Achieving efficient photocatalytic degradation of organic pollutants requires precise control over semiconductor-substrate interfaces. In this work, we report a hierarchical TiO2 nanohorn (TNH) architecture grown hydrothermally over nanocrystalline diamond (NCD) films. The NCD films induce the growth of ultra-nano TNH over primary nanohorns, facilitated by sp3–sp2 hybridized carbon framework and high-density grain boundaries. These grain boundaries provide high-energy nucleation sites that facilitate localized charge accumulation and promote strain-relief-driven secondary nanohorn growth during hydrothermal processing. This distinct TNH/NCD heterostructure exhibits enhanced interfacial charge transfer and efficient photocarrier separation, as evidenced by advanced spectroscopic and microscopic characterization. Under low-power UV irradiation, the TNH/NCD heterostructure exhibits significantly enhanced photocatalytic activity toward methylene blue (MB 5 ppm), achieving 89.7% degradation within 210 min with a pseudo-first-order rate constant (k = 0.0108 min−1), along with excellent structural stability and recyclability over five successive cycles. The TNH/NCD heterostructure attained enhanced photocatalytic activity in MB degradation, which is attributed to the synergistic effects of interfacial chemistry, high surface area, enhanced light-matter interaction, reduced recombination rates, and improved charge carrier dynamics facilitated by the sp3–sp2 hybridized NCD framework. Our findings highlight the crucial influence of substrate selection on photocatalyst performance and establish NCD as a highly effective platform for constructing advanced TiO2-based photocatalytic systems for environmental remediation.

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