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Multi-function adsorbent-photocatalyst MXene-TiO2 composites for removal of enrofloxacin antibiotic from water
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Document Title
Multi-function adsorbent-photocatalyst MXene-TiO2 composites for removal of enrofloxacin antibiotic from water
Author
Sukidpaneenid S, Chawengkijwanich C, Pokhum C, Isobe T, Opaprakasit P, Sreearunothai P
Name from Authors Collection
Scopus Author ID
37861910100
Affiliations
Thammasat University; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Nanotechnology Center (NANOTEC); Tokyo Institute of Technology; Thammasat University
Type
Article
Source Title
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
ISSN
1001-0742
Year
2023
Volume
124
Page
414-428
Open Access
Bronze
Publisher
SCIENCE PRESS
DOI
10.1016/j.jes.2021.09.042
Format
Abstract
MXenes, a new family of two-dimensional transition metal carbides or nitrides, have attracted tremendous attention for various applications due to their unique properties such as good electrical conductivity, hydrophilicity, and ion intercalability. In this work, Ti3C2 MXene, or MX, is converted to MX-TiO2 composites using a simple and rapid microwave hydrothermal treatment in HCl/NaCl mixture solution that induces formation of fine TiO2 particles on the MX parent structure and imparts photocatalytic activity to the resulting MX-TiO2 composites. The composites were used for enrofloxacin (ENR), a frequently found contaminating antibiotic, removal from water. The relative amount of the MX and TiO2 can be controlled by controlling the hydrothermal temperature resulting in composites with tunable adsorption/photocatalytic properties. NaCl addition was found to play important role as composites synthesized without NaCl could not adsorb enrofloxacin well. Adding NaCl into the hydrothermal treatment causes sodium ions to be simultaneously intercalated into the composite structure, improving ENR adsorption greatly from 1 to 6 mg ENR/g composite. It also slows down the MX to TiO2 conversion leading to a smaller and more uniform distribution of TiO2 particles on the structure. MX-TiO2/NaCl composites, which have sodium intercalated in their structures, showed both higher ENR adsorption and photocatalytic activity than composites without NaCl despite the latter having higher TiO2 content. Adsorbed ENR on the composites can be efficiently degraded by free radicals generated from the photoexcited TiO2 particles, leading to high photocatalytic degradation efficiency. This demonstrates the synergetic effect between adsorption and photocatalytic degradation of the synthesized compounds. (C) 2022 The Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Published by Elsevier B.V.
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Funding Sponsor
National Nanotechnology Center (NANOTEC) [P1751698]; Thailand Advanced Institute of Science and Technology and Tokyo Institute of Technology (TAIST-Tokyo Tech); Thammasat University Research Fund; TUFT [055/2563, T2 2-62-03]; Thammasat University-National Science and Technology Development Agency (TU-NSTDA) Excellent Research Graduate Scholarship, Thailand; Center of Excellence in Functional Advanced Materials Engineering (CoE FAME) , SIIT, Thammasat Univer-sity
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Publication Source
WOS