| Literature DB >> 35457958 |
Zhandos Shalabayev1,2, Matej Baláž3, Natalya Khan1, Yelmira Nurlan1, Adrian Augustyniak4,5, Nina Daneu6, Batukhan Tatykayev1, Erika Dutková3, Gairat Burashev1, Mariano Casas-Luna7,8, Róbert Džunda9, Radovan Bureš9, Ladislav Čelko7, Aleksandr Ilin2, Mukhambetkali Burkitbayev1.
Abstract
CdS nanoparticles were successfully synthesized using cadmium acetate and sodium sulfide as Cd and S precursors, respectively. The effect of using sodium thiosulfate as an additional sulfur precursor was also investigated (combined milling). The samples were characterized by XRD, Raman spectroscopy, XPS, UV-Vis spectroscopy, PL spectroscopy, DLS, and TEM. Photocatalytic activities of both CdS samples were compared. The photocatalytic activity of CdS, which is produced by combined milling, was superior to that of CdS, and was obtained by an acetate route in the degradation of Orange II under visible light irradiation. Better results for CdS prepared using a combined approach were also evidenced in photocatalytic experiments on hydrogen generation. The antibacterial potential of mechanochemically prepared CdS nanocrystals was also tested on reference strains of E. coli and S. aureus. Susceptibility tests included a 24-h toxicity test, a disk diffusion assay, and respiration monitoring. Bacterial growth was not completely inhibited by the presence of neither nanomaterial in the growth environment. However, the experiments have confirmed that the nanoparticles have some capability to inhibit bacterial growth during the logarithmic growth phase, with a more substantial effect coming from CdS nanoparticles prepared in the absence of sodium thiosulfate. The present research demonstrated the solvent-free, facile, and sustainable character of mechanochemical synthesis to produce semiconductor nanocrystals with multidisciplinary application.Entities:
Keywords: antibacterial activity; combined milling; hydrogen evolution; mechanosynthesis; photocatalysis; semiconductor; wastewater treatment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35457958 PMCID: PMC9024533 DOI: 10.3390/nano12081250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.719
Figure 1XRD patterns of mechanochemically synthesized aCdS and cCdS samples.
Figure 2Raman spectra of as-synthesized aCdS and cCdS samples.
Figure 3Core level emissions of (a) Cd 3d and (b) S 2p from the XPS spectra of mechanochemically synthesized aCdS and cCdS powders.
Figure 4UV-Vis absorption spectra of aCdS and cCdS samples.
Figure 5Tauc’s plots with the determined bandgap energy of aCdS and cCdS samples.
Figure 6PL emission spectra of aCdS and cCdS samples.
Figure 7SEM images of the mechanochemically synthesized CdS samples: (a,b) aCdS; (c,d) cCdS.
Figure 8TEM analysis of the mechanochemically synthesized CdS samples: low-magnification images of the (a) aCdS and (d) cCdS samples with SAED; high-resolution TEM analysis of the (b) aCdS and (e) cCdS samples; (c) detailed analysis of aCdS sample.
Figure 9Grain size distribution of aCdS and cCdS samples.
Figure 10Photocatalytic degradation profiles of mechanochemically synthesized aCdS and cCdS catalysts under visible light irradiation.
Figure 11Kinetic linear simulation curves for Orange II photocatalytic degradation over aCdS and cCdS samples.
The parameters for the pseudo-first-order photocatalytic reaction of aCdS and cCdS.
| The Sample | k, min−1 |
|
|---|---|---|
| aCdS | 0.012 | 0.98 |
| cCdS | 0.018 | 0.98 |
Comparison of photocatalytic activities of CdS nanoparticles with other methods.
| № | Synthetic Method | Experimental Conditions | Precursors | Degraded Dye, Concentration | Photocatalytic Efficiency | Rate Constant | [Ref] | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time | Temperature (°C) | |||||||
| 1 | Composite-molten-salt | 24–72 h | 160–220 | Cd(NO3)2·4H2O, Na2S·9H2O, LiNO3, KNO3 | MB, | 76.3%@140 min | - | [ |
| RhB, | 94.9%@140 min | - | ||||||
| 2 | Solvothermal | 6 h | 180 | CdCl2·5H2O, CS(NH2)2 | MB, | 95%@80 min | 0.0365 | [ |
| 3 | One-step solid-state reaction | 30 min | - | Cd(CH3COO)2·2H2O, Na2S2O3·5H2O | RhB, | 95%@80 min | 0.0429 | [ |
| 4 | Biogenic synthesis | 72 h | 28 | Strain of T. Harzianum, CdCl2, Na2S | MB, | 37.15%@60 min | 0.0076 | [ |
| 5 | Hydrothermal | 24 h | - | Cd(Ac)2·2H2O, PVP-K30, CS(NH2)2 | MO, | 93.3%@240 min | - | [ |
| 6 | Sonochemical | 1 h | RT | Cd(CH3COO)2, Na2S, tryptophan | MO, | 75.33%@240 min | 0.0062 | [ |
| 7 | Photochemical | 24 h | - | CdSO4, Na2S2O3 | MO, | 26.3%@70 min | 0.0058 | [ |
| 8 | Commercial CdS | - | - | - | MO, | 78%@90 min | - | [ |
| 9 | Mechanochemical | 5 min | RT | Cd(CH3COO)2·2H2O, Na2S·9H2O, Na2S2O3·5H2O, C6H8O7 | Orange II, | 93%@180 min | 0.018 | this work |
Figure 12Photocatalytic H2 production over aCdS and cCdS samples.
Figure 13Optical density of 24-h cultures of S. aureus (first row) and E. coli (second row) contacted with CdS nanoparticles or deionized water.
Figure 14Respiration of cultures after 24-h incubation with nanomaterials or deionized water; S. aureus (first row) and E. coli (second row).
Figure 15Respiration of cultures in the logarithmic growth phase in resazurin assay; S. aureus (first row) and E. coli (second row).