| Literature DB >> 35423502 |
Gabriele Capilli1, Damian Rodríguez Sartori2, Monica C Gonzalez2, Enzo Laurenti1, Claudio Minero1, Paola Calza1.
Abstract
We present a photoactive composite material for water decontamination consisting of non-purified commercial multiwalled carbon nanotubes (CNT(NP)s) supported on an electrospun polymeric mat made of core-sheath polyacrylonitrile-polypyrrole nanofibers. This is the first system that specifically exploits the superior photocatalytic activity of CNT(NP)s compared with the purified carbon nanotubes usually employed. A CNT(NP) still contains the catalytic metal oxide nanoparticles (NPs) used for its synthesis, embedded in the nanotube structure. Under UV-visible irradiation, these NPs generate highly reactive ˙OH radicals capable of degrading the organic molecules adsorbed on the nanotube. Photocatalytic tests on the composite material show that CNT(NP)s act mostly as a source of photogenerated charge carriers. The adsorption of target substrates occurs preferentially onto the polypyrrole sheath, which shuttles the reactive carriers from CNT(NP)s to the substrates. In addition, UV-visible irradiation of semiconducting polypyrrole generates radical species that directly react with the adsorbed substrates. All synthetic procedures reported are scalable and sustainable. This mechanically resistant and flexible composite overcomes one of the weakest aspects of water treatments that employ suspended nanocatalysts, namely the expensive and poorly scalable recovery of the catalyst through nanofiltration. All these features are required for large-scale photocatalytic treatments of polluted water. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35423502 PMCID: PMC8695461 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra10930d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Preparation steps of the composite material PAN@PPY–CNT(NP).
Synthetized materials and their acronyms
| Name | Preparation | Description and scope |
|---|---|---|
| PAN@PPY–CNT(NP) | PAN@PPY mat, covered with the CNT(NP) suspension and finally with the pyrrole polymerizing solution | Complete system |
| PAN@PPY | PAN nanofibers just coated with PPY | Reference material to indirectly investigate the CNT(NP) contribution to the removal efficiency of the complete system |
| PAN–CNTcold | PAN mat just covered with the CNT(NP) suspension and then dried at 4 °C for 2 cycles (without PPY) | Reference material to indirectly investigate the PPY photoactivity and the role of PPY as entrapping/binding agent for the CNT(NP)s |
| PAN–CNT(NP) | PAN mat just covered with the CNT(NP) suspension and then dried at 100 °C for 1 h, for 2 cycles | Same as PAN–CNTcold, but with a higher drying temperature to promote the attachment of CNT(NP)s on PAN |
| PAN@PPY–(CNT) | PAN@PPY mat, covered with the CNT(NP) suspension for 2 cycles. No final coverage with PPY was applied | Reference material to investigate the effect of the final PPY layer on the mechanical stability of the CNT(NP) layer |
| PAN@CNT-PPY | PAN mat first covered with the CNT(NP) suspension, for 2 cycles, then with the pyrrole polymerizing solution (no initial coverage with PPY) | Reference material to indirectly investigate the role of the initial PPY functionalization of the PAN surface for the subsequent CNT(NP) layer attachment |
| PAN@PPY–CNT | Same as PAN@PPY–CNT(NP), but with HCl-purified CNTs | Reference material to indirectly investigate the photocatalytic effect of the metal oxide NPs in the CNT(NP)s |
Fig. 2(a) TEM micrograph of pristine CNT(NP)s, scale bar: 1 μm. (b and c) HRTEM micrographs of pristine CNT(NP)s which show the amorphous carbon layer on the CNT(NP) surface (white squares) and metallic NPs embedded in the CNT(NP) structure (white circle), scale bars: 10 nm. (d) FT-IR spectrum of pristine CNT(NP)s.
Fig. 3SEM micrographs of (a) PAN@PPY nanofibers, and (b) CNT(NP)s entrapped on PAN@PPY surface (PAN@PPY–CNT(NP) material). Insets report the pictures of the corresponding mats. Scale bars: 5 μm.
Summary of the mean values and standard deviations of the surface elemental composition of PAN@PPY mat and PAN@PPY–CNT(NP) composite, based on XPS survey scans performed on 6 different spots per sample. The corresponding spectra are reported in Fig. S4
| Sample | Atomic% | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C 1s | N 1s | O 1s | S 2p | |
| PAN@PPY | 72 ± 4 | 10 ± 1 | 14 ± 3 | 4 ± 1 |
| PAN@PPY–CNT(NP) | 76 ± 4 | 8 ± 1 | 13 ± 2 | 3 ± 1 |
| PAN@PPY–CNT(NP) (richer in CNTs) | 90 ± 3 | 3 ± 1 | 6 ± 2 | 1 ± 0.5 |
Fig. 4EPR spectra of PAN@PPY, PAN@PPY–CNTHCl, and PAN@PPY–CNT(NP) mats. PAN@PPY–CNT(NP) are tested right after the synthesis, after the 1st cycle of experiments on RB removal, and after the 2nd cycle.
Fig. 5(a) First and (b) second removal cycles of RB (10−5 M) in the presence of PAN–CNT(NP) (▲), PAN@PPY (■), and PAN@PPY–CNT(NP) (◆) mats under Solarbox irradiation. The direct photolysis of the target substrate (◇) is also reported. (c) First-order kinetic constants calculated from the time evolution of the substrate concentration shown in panels (a) and (b).
Fig. 6Tensile stress–strain curves for PAN@PPY–CNT(NP) mat before irradiation (a) and after 1 week of continuous irradiation in the conditions chosen for the photocatalytic tests (b).