Cargando…

Growth of binary anatase–rutile on phosphorylated graphene through strong P–O–Ti bonding affords a stable visible-light photocatalyst

Titanium dioxide is an ubiquitous photocatalyst in water-cleaning technologies, being presently the most promising tools to resolve the global issue of sewage treatment. In this framework, titanium dioxide–graphene nanocomposites are discussed as promising visible-light activated photocatalysts but...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zirar, Fatima-Ezzahra, Anouar, Aicha, Katir, Nadia, Ichou, Ihya Ait, El Kadib, Abdelkrim
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9038032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35480731
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra05275f
_version_ 1784693845453176832
author Zirar, Fatima-Ezzahra
Anouar, Aicha
Katir, Nadia
Ichou, Ihya Ait
El Kadib, Abdelkrim
author_facet Zirar, Fatima-Ezzahra
Anouar, Aicha
Katir, Nadia
Ichou, Ihya Ait
El Kadib, Abdelkrim
author_sort Zirar, Fatima-Ezzahra
collection PubMed
description Titanium dioxide is an ubiquitous photocatalyst in water-cleaning technologies, being presently the most promising tools to resolve the global issue of sewage treatment. In this framework, titanium dioxide–graphene nanocomposites are discussed as promising visible-light activated photocatalysts but little is hitherto known about the surface and interface chemistry bridging the metal oxide and carbon phases. In an attempt to spotlight this overlooked issue, we herein designed two different hybrid nanocomposites through covalent grafting and growth of titanium dioxide clusters on graphene oxide and on phosphorylated graphene oxide, which affords GO@TiO(2) and PGO@TiO(2), respectively. While anatase could be selectively harvested on the surface of GO@TiO(2), biphasic anatase–rutile nucleates could be obtained on PGO@TiO(2). Thermal annealing treatments improve the metal oxide crystallization and further remove oxygenated groups from the surface of graphene. The interfacial stability of these photocatalysts was also investigated under irradiation, with the graphene support being sensitive to the proximal presence of titanium dioxide. The resulting nanocomposites were also assessed for methylene blue removal through adsorption and photocatalysis. Regardless of their composition, superior photoactivity was noticed for the nanocomposites compared to commercially available degussa that display marginal visible-light photoactivity (11% removal). Within our study, PGO@TiO(2)-500 stands as the most active catalyst, allowing nearly quantitative removal of the pollutant from water. The superior performance of PGO@TiO(2)-500 can be explained by the highest stability reached through P–O–Ti bonding, its improved crystallinity, and the reduction of the graphene surface during thermal treatment. On a whole, this study provides a blueprint for comparing semiconducting metal oxide grown on tuneable surface-interfacial graphene environments and highlights the utility of surface-engineering graphene sheets to access efficient visible-light oxidation photocatalysts.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9038032
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher The Royal Society of Chemistry
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-90380322022-04-26 Growth of binary anatase–rutile on phosphorylated graphene through strong P–O–Ti bonding affords a stable visible-light photocatalyst Zirar, Fatima-Ezzahra Anouar, Aicha Katir, Nadia Ichou, Ihya Ait El Kadib, Abdelkrim RSC Adv Chemistry Titanium dioxide is an ubiquitous photocatalyst in water-cleaning technologies, being presently the most promising tools to resolve the global issue of sewage treatment. In this framework, titanium dioxide–graphene nanocomposites are discussed as promising visible-light activated photocatalysts but little is hitherto known about the surface and interface chemistry bridging the metal oxide and carbon phases. In an attempt to spotlight this overlooked issue, we herein designed two different hybrid nanocomposites through covalent grafting and growth of titanium dioxide clusters on graphene oxide and on phosphorylated graphene oxide, which affords GO@TiO(2) and PGO@TiO(2), respectively. While anatase could be selectively harvested on the surface of GO@TiO(2), biphasic anatase–rutile nucleates could be obtained on PGO@TiO(2). Thermal annealing treatments improve the metal oxide crystallization and further remove oxygenated groups from the surface of graphene. The interfacial stability of these photocatalysts was also investigated under irradiation, with the graphene support being sensitive to the proximal presence of titanium dioxide. The resulting nanocomposites were also assessed for methylene blue removal through adsorption and photocatalysis. Regardless of their composition, superior photoactivity was noticed for the nanocomposites compared to commercially available degussa that display marginal visible-light photoactivity (11% removal). Within our study, PGO@TiO(2)-500 stands as the most active catalyst, allowing nearly quantitative removal of the pollutant from water. The superior performance of PGO@TiO(2)-500 can be explained by the highest stability reached through P–O–Ti bonding, its improved crystallinity, and the reduction of the graphene surface during thermal treatment. On a whole, this study provides a blueprint for comparing semiconducting metal oxide grown on tuneable surface-interfacial graphene environments and highlights the utility of surface-engineering graphene sheets to access efficient visible-light oxidation photocatalysts. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021-08-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9038032/ /pubmed/35480731 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra05275f Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Zirar, Fatima-Ezzahra
Anouar, Aicha
Katir, Nadia
Ichou, Ihya Ait
El Kadib, Abdelkrim
Growth of binary anatase–rutile on phosphorylated graphene through strong P–O–Ti bonding affords a stable visible-light photocatalyst
title Growth of binary anatase–rutile on phosphorylated graphene through strong P–O–Ti bonding affords a stable visible-light photocatalyst
title_full Growth of binary anatase–rutile on phosphorylated graphene through strong P–O–Ti bonding affords a stable visible-light photocatalyst
title_fullStr Growth of binary anatase–rutile on phosphorylated graphene through strong P–O–Ti bonding affords a stable visible-light photocatalyst
title_full_unstemmed Growth of binary anatase–rutile on phosphorylated graphene through strong P–O–Ti bonding affords a stable visible-light photocatalyst
title_short Growth of binary anatase–rutile on phosphorylated graphene through strong P–O–Ti bonding affords a stable visible-light photocatalyst
title_sort growth of binary anatase–rutile on phosphorylated graphene through strong p–o–ti bonding affords a stable visible-light photocatalyst
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9038032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35480731
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra05275f
work_keys_str_mv AT zirarfatimaezzahra growthofbinaryanataserutileonphosphorylatedgraphenethroughstrongpotibondingaffordsastablevisiblelightphotocatalyst
AT anouaraicha growthofbinaryanataserutileonphosphorylatedgraphenethroughstrongpotibondingaffordsastablevisiblelightphotocatalyst
AT katirnadia growthofbinaryanataserutileonphosphorylatedgraphenethroughstrongpotibondingaffordsastablevisiblelightphotocatalyst
AT ichouihyaait growthofbinaryanataserutileonphosphorylatedgraphenethroughstrongpotibondingaffordsastablevisiblelightphotocatalyst
AT elkadibabdelkrim growthofbinaryanataserutileonphosphorylatedgraphenethroughstrongpotibondingaffordsastablevisiblelightphotocatalyst