dc.description.abstract |
MoS2/g-CNO (g-CNO = oxidized graphitic carbon
nitride) heterostructures were synthesized by a one-step lowtemperature
hydrothermal route. The hydrolysis and oxidation
reactions during the hydrothermal synthesis provide a fivefold
increase in the surface area of the carbon nitride matrix. The
heterostructure formation between MoS2 and the g-CNO matrix
induced reduced recombination effects, and 1 wt.-% MoS2/g-
CNO composites showed the highest photocatalytic activity to-
Introduction
Over the past few decades, the widespread industrial release of
various organic pollutants has induced deleterious effects on
both humans and animals. The traditional methods employed
for the degradation of pollutants are expensive, time-consuming,
and often produce toxic products that are retained in the
effluent. Therefore, a “green” photocatalytic strategy that utilizes
solar energy has been considered as an environmentally
benign pathway for the removal of organic pollutants.[1] Recently,
a host of new developments such as electrochemical
water splitting,[2] hydrogen gas production, the reduction of
CO2 to CH4,[3] electricity generation from newer photovoltaic
cells,[4] and the degradation of organic pollutants[5] have been
achieved by exploiting solar energy and by employing photocatalytic
technology.
The photocatalytic efficiencies of the initially developed
metal chalcogenides such as TiO2, ZnO, ZnS, BiVO4, Ag3PO4,
CdS, WO3, and TaON have been confined by several factors such
as photoexcited electron–hole recombination, negligible absorption
in the visible range of the solar spectrum, inferior
charge-carrier mobility, improper band-gap alignment, and the
[a] Materials Science and Technology Division (MSTD), National Institute
for Interdisciplinary Science and Technology, Council of Scientific and
Industrial Research (CSIR-NIIST),
Thiruvananthapuram 695019, India
E-mail: hareesh@niist.res.in
http://www.niist.res.in/english/scientists/hareesh-u-s/personal.html
[b] R&D Center, Noritake Company LTD,
Miyoshi Higashiyama 300, Miyoshi, Aichi 470- 0293, Japan
[c] Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research,
New Delhi, India
Supporting information and ORCID(s) from the author(s) for this article are
available on the WWW under http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ejic.201600232.
Eur. J. Inorg. Chem. 2016, 3912–3920 3912 © 2016 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
wards the degradation of organic pollutants under visible-light
irradiation. Moreover, owing to the presence of groups with
negative inductive effects in g-CNO and g-CNO-based composites,
the photocatalytic activities were higher than that of bare
g-C3N4. Recyclability studies on the synthesized catalysts indicated
no loss of efficiency after four cycles. Thus, these MoS2/
g-CNO heterostructures are promising photocatalysts for the
degradation of organic pollutants. |
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