| Literature DB >> 30460496 |
Junlin Lu1, Chaoqun Shang1, Qingguo Meng2, Haiqin Lv2, Zhihong Chen3,4, Hua Liao5, Ming Li5, Yongguang Zhang6, Mingliang Jin1,6, Mingzhe Yuan2, Xin Wang7,8, Guofu Zhou1,6.
Abstract
A series of novel visible light driven all-solid-state Z-scheme BiOBr0.3I0.7/Ag/AgI photocatalysts were synthesized by facile in situ precipitation and photo-reduction methods. Under visible light irradiation, the BiOBr0.3I0.7/Ag/AgI samples exhibited enhanced photocatalytic activity compared to BiOBr0.3I0.7 and AgI in the degradation of methyl orange (MO). The optimal ratio of added elemental Ag was 15%, which degraded 89% of MO within 20 min. The enhanced photocatalytic activity of BiOBr0.3I0.7/Ag/AgI can be ascribed to the efficient separation of photo-generated electron-hole pairs through a Z-scheme charge-carrier migration pathway, in which Ag nanoparticles act as electron mediators. The mechanism study indicated that ·O2- and h+ are active radicals for photocatalytic degradation and that a small amount of ·OH also participates in the photocatalytic degradation process.Entities:
Keywords: BiOBr0.3I0.7/Ag/AgI; Photocatalytic; Z-scheme
Year: 2018 PMID: 30460496 PMCID: PMC6246750 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-018-2778-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1XRD patterns of BiOBr0.3I0.7, BAA-x and BiOBr0.3I0.7/AgI (a), XPS survey spectra of BAA-15 (b), BAA-15 XPS spectra of Bi 4f (c), Br 3d (d), I 3d (e), and Ag 3d (f)
Fig. 2SEM images of BBA-3(a), TEM images of BBA-3 (b), HRTEM and FFT images of BAA-3 (c), and BiOBr0.3I0.7/AgI (d)
EDS result of BAA-x samples and BiOBr0.3I0.7/AgI
| Sample | Atom content (at. %) | AgI (%) | Metallic Ag (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bi | I | Br | Ag | |||
| BAA-1 | 49.51 | 35.23 | 13.37 | 1.87 | 0.573 | 1.297 |
| BAA-2 | 47.08 | 34.62 | 15.5 | 2.81 | 1.664 | 1.146 |
| BAA-3 | 47.36 | 34.37 | 12.91 | 5.35 | 1.218 | 4.132 |
| BAA-4 | 46.44 | 33.47 | 14.68 | 5.41 | 0.962 | 4.448 |
| BiOBr0.3I0.7/AgI | 50.75 | 33.4 | 13.06 | 2.79 | 2.79 | 0 |
Fig. 3UV–vis DRS spectra of BiOBr0.3I0.7, BAA-x, and BiOBr0.3I0.7/AgI
Fig. 4Photocatalytic activities of MO degradation presented by different samples
Fig. 5Results from the radical trapping experiment in the presence of BAA-15 (a) and the EPR spectra of the photo-generated hole (b), ·O2− radical (c), and ·OH radical (d)
Fig. 6Schematic of the mechanism of the photodegradation of MO by BAA-x