| Literature DB >> 35539079 |
Jie Zhang1,2,3, Jia Wang1,2,4,3, Huihui Xu1,2,4,3, Xianzi Lv1,2,3, YuXiang Zeng1, Jizhou Duan1,2,3, Baorong Hou1,2,3.
Abstract
With the discharge of large amount of organic pollutants and antibiotics into the water environment, the water cycle has been seriously polluted, and at the same time, various drug-resistant bacteria have emerged in succession, which poses a serious threat to human health. In recent years, photocatalytic nanomaterials have become a research hotspot in the antimicrobial area. In this study, AgBr/AgVO3 photocatalysts were prepared by a hydrothermal process and an in situ growth method. The composites were tightly connected by the (501) plane of AgVO3 and the (200) lattice plane of AgBr. The photocatalytic activity was tested by degrading Rhodamine B (RhB) solution under visible-light, and the result indicated that the photodegradation rate for RhB solution was 92.3% by the photocatalysis with 0.5AgBr/AgVO3 and the photocatalytic performance of 0.5AgBr/AgVO3 was improved compared to pure AgVO3 and AgBr. In addition, more than 99.997% of E. coli, S. aureus, and P. aeruginosa cells were killed by the photocatalysis with 0.5AgBr/AgVO3 within 30 min. These results demonstrated that the 0.5AgBr/AgVO3 heterojunction photocatalyst could be widely used in the treatment of environmental pollution and in the antibacterial field. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 35539079 PMCID: PMC9075520 DOI: 10.1039/c9ra06810d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1XRD patterns of AgBr/AgVO3 heterostructures with different molar ratios.
Fig. 2SEM images of as-synthesized samples: (a) pure AgVO3, (b) pure AgBr, (c) 0.1AgBr/AgVO3, (d) 0.3AgBr/AgVO3, (e) 0.5AgBr/AgVO3, (f) 0.7AgBr/AgVO3.
Fig. 3TEM images in low magnification (a and b), high magnification (c) and the corresponding HRTEM image of 0.5AgVO3/AgBr (d).
The specific surface area of different samples
| Sample |
|
|---|---|
| AgBr | 3.8990 |
| AgVO3 | 9.0904 |
| 0.1AgBr/AgVO3 | 23.3675 |
| 0.3AgBr/AgVO3 | 35.0681 |
| 0.5AgBr/AgVO3 | 21.7348 |
| 0.7AgBr/AgVO3 | 11.1933 |
Fig. 4XPS spectra of 0.5AgBr/AgVO3 composition: (a) survey, (b) Ag 3d, (c) V 2p, (d) O 1s, and (e) Br 3d.
Fig. 5UV-vis diffuse reflectance spectra of composites.
Fig. 6(a) Photocatalytic degradation curves of RhB solution for different photocatalysts; (b) UV-DRS of RhB solutions at different time with 0.5AgBr/AgVO3; (c) the first-order kinetics of RhB degradation in the presence of different photocatalysts; (d) the degradation rate constant of RhB with different samples.
Fig. 7(a) P. aeruginosa survival curves in the antibacterial experiments, (b) photocatalytic antibacterial rates of E. coli, S. aureus and P. aeruginosa with 0.5AgBr/AgVO3 for 30 min, and the survival pictures of P. aeruginosa colonies in the presence of different photocatalysts (c).
Fig. 8(a) Recycling photocatalytic antibacterial rates for P. aeruginosa; (b) XRD pattern of 0.5AgBr/AgVO3 after six recycling experiments; (c) SEM image of 0.5AgBr/AgVO3 after six recycling experiments under visible light irradiation.
Fig. 9The active species trapping experiments for degradation of RhB with AgBr/AgVO3 photocatalyst under visible light irradiation.
Fig. 10Schematic diagram of the proposed mechanism.