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The coral-like carbon nitride array: Rational design for efficient photodegradation of tetracycline under visible light

Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering [2023]
Xingyu Zhan, Yunxiong Zeng, Hao Zhang, Xinqing Wang, Dingfen Jin, Hongxiao Jin, Shenglian Luo, Liming Yang, Bo Hong
ABSTRACT

Carbon nitride photoactivity is limited by poor light utilization, rapid recombination of electron-hole ( e - -h + ) pairs, and sluggish surface/interface reaction. Surface/interface modification is a promising strategy to get rid of these restrictions. Therefore, understanding surface/interface properties is highly worth in-depth consideration to improve carbon nitride photoactivity. Herein, the nitrogen-vacancy (Nv) and oxygen substitution (Os) co-modified carbon nitride coral-like array were rationally designed by a combination of thermal calcination and hydrothermal process. Results verified Nv extended the adsorption edge toward visible light and hampered the recombination of e - -h + pairs and Os accelerated surface/interface kinetics. In consequence, the optimized photocatalyst (Nv, Os)-CN-6 can degrade 80 % of tetracycline (TC) with the pseudo-first-order kinetic constant of 0.124 min −1 , 13.8-fold higher than pristine carbon nitride. Furthermore, Nv and Os can well resist the toxic effect of interfering agents in simulated practical wastewater. Finally, Nv and Os endow (Nv, Os)-CN-6 mineralizing TC with low/non-ecology-risk intermediates evolution based on the HPLC-MS and T.E.S.T. software simulation. This study provides new insights into the rational design of carbon nitride for photodegrading TC.

MATERIALS

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