The current environmental and potable
water crisis requires technological
advancement to tackle the issues caused by different organic pollutants.
Herein, we report the degradation of organic pollutants such as Congo
Red and acetophenone from aqueous media using visible light irradiation.
To harvest the solar energy for photocatalysis, we fabricated a nanohybrid
system composed of bismuth ferrite nanoparticles with two-dimensional
(2D) MXene sheets, namely, the BiFeO3 (BFO)/Ti3C2 (MXene) nanohybrid, for enhanced photocatalytic activity.
The hybrid BFO/MXene is fabricated using a simple and low-cost double-solvent
solvothermal method. The SEM and TEM images showed that the BFO nanoparticles
are attached onto the surface of 2D MXene sheets. The photocatalytic
degradation achieved by the hybrid is found to be 100% in 42 min for
the organic dye (Congo Red) and 100% for the colorless aqueous pollutant
(acetophenone) in 150 min. The BFO/MXene hybrid system exhibited a
large surface area of 147 m2 g–1 measured
via the Brunauer–Emmett–Teller sorption–desorption
technique, which is found to be the largest among all BFO nanoparticles
and derivatives. The photoluminescence spectra indicate a low electron–hole
recombination rate. Fast and efficient degradation of organic molecules
is caused by two factors: larger surface area and lower electron–hole
recombination rate, which makes the BFO/MXene nanohybrid a highly
efficient photocatalyst and a promising candidate for many future
applications.
Owing to the tremendous energy storage capacity of two-dimensional transition metal carbides (MXenes), they have been efficiently utilized as a promising candidate in the field of super-capacitors.
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