posted on 2022-12-28, 19:10authored byYassine Cherif, Hajer Azzi, Kishore Sridharan, Seulgi Ji, Heechae Choi, Michael G. Allan, Sihem Benaissa, Karima Saidi-Bendahou, Lois Damptey, Camila Silva Ribeiro, Satheesh Krishnamurthy, Sanjay Nagarajan, M. Mercedes Maroto-Valer, Moritz F. Kuehnel, Sudhagar Pitchaimuthu
This work demonstrates
a two-step gram-scale synthesis of presynthesized
silver (Ag) nanoparticles impregnated with mesoporous TiO2 and evaluates their feasibility for wastewater treatment and hydrogen
gas generation under natural sunlight. Paracetamol was chosen as the
model pharmaceutical pollutant for evaluating photocatalytic performance.
A systematic material analysis (morphology, chemical environment,
optical bandgap energy) of the Ag/TiO2 photocatalyst powder
was carried out, and the influence of material properties on the performance
is discussed in detail. The experimental results showed that the decoration
of anatase TiO2 nanoparticles (size between 80 and 100
nm) with 5 nm Ag nanoparticles (1 wt %) induced visible-light absorption
and enhanced charge carrier separation. As a result, 0.01 g/L Ag/TiO2 effectively removed 99% of 0.01 g/L paracetamol in 120 min
and exhibited 60% higher photocatalytic removal than pristine TiO2. Alongside paracetamol degradation, Ag/TiO2 led
to the generation of 1729 μmol H2 g–1 h–1. This proof-of-concept approach for tandem
pollutant degradation and hydrogen generation was further evaluated
with rare earth metal (lanthanum)- and nonmetal (nitrogen)-doped TiO2, which also showed a positive response. Using a combination
of ab initio calculations and our new theory model,
we revealed that the enhanced photocatalytic performance of Ag/TiO2 was due to the surface Fermi-level change of TiO2 and lowered surface reaction energy barrier for water pollutant
oxidation. This work opens new opportunities for exploiting tandem
photocatalytic routes beyond water splitting and understanding the
simultaneous reactions in metal-doped metal oxide photocatalyst systems
under natural sunlight.