“…Due to their extensive use in many types of industries, one of the most widespread water contaminants are organic dyes, which are reported to be responsible for respiratory toxicity and cancer 1,2 . Currently, the approaches to dye removal mainly depend on traditional biological, physical, and chemical techniques, such as precipitation, coagulation, adsorption, filtration, membrane separation, or biodegradation, but they are far from satisfactory, mainly due to cost control and harmless processing 3–6 . To solve this problem, different photocatalytic approaches are being developed to remove pollutants from wastewater, due to their potential to degrade and mineralize toxic organic dyes into less harmful compounds such as H 2 O, CO 2 , and NO 3 − 7–9 .…”