Enhanced photocatalytic degradation of diazinon using Ni:ZnO/Fe3O4 nanocomposite under solar light

Salehzadeh, Hamzeh, Wantala, Kitirote, Shahmoradi, Behzad, Maleki, Afshin, Suwannaruang, Totsaporn, Shivaraju, Harikaranahalli Puttaiah, Mohammadi, Ebrahim, Ren, Guogang, Jenkins, David F., Choi, Hee Jeong and Safari, Mahdi (2024) Enhanced photocatalytic degradation of diazinon using Ni:ZnO/Fe3O4 nanocomposite under solar light. ISSN 1876-1070
Copy

Background: The increasing photocatalytic activity of Ni:ZnO/Fe3O4 nanocomposite in the diazinon degradation under solar light compared to bare ZnO and Ni:ZnO nanoparticles was examined. Methods: The synthesized nanoparticles and nanocomposite were characterized by SEM, MAP-EDX, XRD, FTIR, DLS, Zeta Potential and UV–Vis Spectrophotometer methods. The photocatalytic degradation of diazinon was investigated under sunlight illumination while continuously mixing on a stirrer for 180 min. Significant findings: The highest degradation efficiency was achieved for 1.5 wt% Ni:ZnO nanoparticles and 1.0 wt% Ni:ZnO/Fe3O4 nanocomposite at a diazinon concentration of 10 mg/L for the nanoparticle dose equal to 2 g/L was 95 % and 93 %, respectively. The recycling photocatalysts were investigated. Application of H2O2, potassium peroxymonosulfate (PMS) and S2O82− as chemical oxidants increased the photocatalytic activity of the nanocomposite. The use of 1.0 wt% Ni:ZnO/Fe3O4 nanocomposite along with 0.01 M H2O2 displayed the increasing photocatalytic performance. The simultaneous photocatalytic degradation efficiency of combined H2O2 and 1.0 wt% NZF nanocomposite for 100 mg/l of diazinon increased from 44 to 82 %. The photocatalytic mechanism of diazinon was proposed in three pathways.

visibility_off picture_as_pdf

picture_as_pdf
JECE-D-24-05705.pdf
lock
Restricted to Repository staff only
Available under Creative Commons: 4.0


Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation METS MODS RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads