Issue 6, 2022

Gas-phase photoelectrocatalytic oxidation of volatile organic compounds using defective WO3/TiO2 nanotubes mesh

Abstract

The gas-phase photoelectrocatalytic (GPEC) approach has proven to be a promising one for overcoming the limitations of the conventional PEC technique for the removal of gaseous pollutants. However, the enhanced catalytic performance of this technique depends on the carrier transfer nature of the photoelectrodes employed. In this study, a defective WO3/TiO2 nanotube array mesh was developed and used as a photoelectrode in a ducted reactor to purify gaseous volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The defects were introduced by an electrochemical reduction approach, through which a significant increase in the carrier concentration and a decrease in its transfer barrier were achieved. As a result, the photogenerated electrons and holes were swiftly separated under a tiny external bias voltage. Furthermore, the bulk oxygen vacancies, generally serving as recombination centers for the carriers in a photocatalytic system, changed to charge carrier sources to facilitate the oxidation of VOCs with an external bias by weakening the trapping between holes and electrons. The ducted reactor so designed combined the advantages of both the defect strategy and the GPEC approach, which led to high performance with greater stability in the purification of gaseous VOCs.

Graphical abstract: Gas-phase photoelectrocatalytic oxidation of volatile organic compounds using defective WO3/TiO2 nanotubes mesh

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 2 2022
Accepted
05 5 2022
First published
19 5 2022

Environ. Sci.: Nano, 2022,9, 2172-2181

Gas-phase photoelectrocatalytic oxidation of volatile organic compounds using defective WO3/TiO2 nanotubes mesh

X. Wang, H. Pan, M. Murugananthan, M. Sun and Y. Zhang, Environ. Sci.: Nano, 2022, 9, 2172 DOI: 10.1039/D2EN00130F

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