Photocatalytic degradation of Congo red using doped zinc oxide nanoparticles

The photocatalytic degradation of Congo Red (CR) was studied using zinc oxide (ZnO) nanoparticles as catalyst (ZC, NZ, AZ and ANZ) under UV light, solar and dark. ZnO nanoparticles were synthesized by one-step liquid impregnation and each nanoparticles was calcined at 60 oC for 4 hours. The UV-vis s...

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Main Authors: Blessing Chidinma Nwaiwu, Emeka Emmanuel Oguzie, Christopher Chibuzor Ejiogu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2024-02-01
Series:EQA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eqa.unibo.it/article/view/18803
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author Blessing Chidinma Nwaiwu
Emeka Emmanuel Oguzie
Christopher Chibuzor Ejiogu
author_facet Blessing Chidinma Nwaiwu
Emeka Emmanuel Oguzie
Christopher Chibuzor Ejiogu
author_sort Blessing Chidinma Nwaiwu
collection DOAJ
description The photocatalytic degradation of Congo Red (CR) was studied using zinc oxide (ZnO) nanoparticles as catalyst (ZC, NZ, AZ and ANZ) under UV light, solar and dark. ZnO nanoparticles were synthesized by one-step liquid impregnation and each nanoparticles was calcined at 60 oC for 4 hours. The UV-vis spectra study assured that the band gap decreased as N and Ag doped to ZnO and hence the absorption band shifts toward the longer wavelength region (red shift). The morphological structures of as-synthesized nanomaterials were investigated by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscope (SEM). The parameters studied were catalyst dosage and the pH of the reaction mixture. The degradation of the dye was found to be effective in the range; catalyst dose of 0.10, 0.20, 0.30 and 0.4 g ZnO catalyst/100 mL of dye solution, initial concentration 10 mg/L, and pH 8.11. Experimentation on different catalyst dosage of ZnO nanoparticles showed that 0.2 g ZnO catalyst/100 mL with the percentage degradation (ZC 70%, ANZ 99.7%, AZ 92.5%, NZ 85.8%) is the most suitable catalyst dosage for degrading CR under UV irradiation at 120 min of irradiation time. Photocatalytic processes were found to work better in basic condition and the best pH value was 8.0. The results showed that a percentage Congo Red degradation of 99.7% could be obtained when treating an effluent with 10 mg/L of Congo Red for 120 mins at 0.2 g ZnO catalyst/100 mL of effluent and pH 8 under UV irradiation using nitrogen doped silver co-doped zinc oxide, ANZ) both under solar and UV than (NZ) and silver- nitrogen doped zinc oxide (A), this was attributed to the lower rate of recombination of the photo-generated electrons and holes as well as its lower gap energy.
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spelling doaj.art-4669c056869a469f9f676bfc001b641d2024-02-23T14:58:51ZengUniversity of BolognaEQA2039-98982281-44852024-02-0160182610.6092/issn.2281-4485/1880317165Photocatalytic degradation of Congo red using doped zinc oxide nanoparticlesBlessing Chidinma Nwaiwu0Emeka Emmanuel Oguzie1Christopher Chibuzor Ejiogu2Department of Environmental Management, Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Imo StateDepartment of Environmental Management, Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Imo StateDepartment of Environmental Management, Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Imo StateThe photocatalytic degradation of Congo Red (CR) was studied using zinc oxide (ZnO) nanoparticles as catalyst (ZC, NZ, AZ and ANZ) under UV light, solar and dark. ZnO nanoparticles were synthesized by one-step liquid impregnation and each nanoparticles was calcined at 60 oC for 4 hours. The UV-vis spectra study assured that the band gap decreased as N and Ag doped to ZnO and hence the absorption band shifts toward the longer wavelength region (red shift). The morphological structures of as-synthesized nanomaterials were investigated by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscope (SEM). The parameters studied were catalyst dosage and the pH of the reaction mixture. The degradation of the dye was found to be effective in the range; catalyst dose of 0.10, 0.20, 0.30 and 0.4 g ZnO catalyst/100 mL of dye solution, initial concentration 10 mg/L, and pH 8.11. Experimentation on different catalyst dosage of ZnO nanoparticles showed that 0.2 g ZnO catalyst/100 mL with the percentage degradation (ZC 70%, ANZ 99.7%, AZ 92.5%, NZ 85.8%) is the most suitable catalyst dosage for degrading CR under UV irradiation at 120 min of irradiation time. Photocatalytic processes were found to work better in basic condition and the best pH value was 8.0. The results showed that a percentage Congo Red degradation of 99.7% could be obtained when treating an effluent with 10 mg/L of Congo Red for 120 mins at 0.2 g ZnO catalyst/100 mL of effluent and pH 8 under UV irradiation using nitrogen doped silver co-doped zinc oxide, ANZ) both under solar and UV than (NZ) and silver- nitrogen doped zinc oxide (A), this was attributed to the lower rate of recombination of the photo-generated electrons and holes as well as its lower gap energy.https://eqa.unibo.it/article/view/18803dyestextile wastewater treatmentzinc oxide nanoparticlesphotocatalytic degradationcongo red
spellingShingle Blessing Chidinma Nwaiwu
Emeka Emmanuel Oguzie
Christopher Chibuzor Ejiogu
Photocatalytic degradation of Congo red using doped zinc oxide nanoparticles
EQA
dyes
textile wastewater treatment
zinc oxide nanoparticles
photocatalytic degradation
congo red
title Photocatalytic degradation of Congo red using doped zinc oxide nanoparticles
title_full Photocatalytic degradation of Congo red using doped zinc oxide nanoparticles
title_fullStr Photocatalytic degradation of Congo red using doped zinc oxide nanoparticles
title_full_unstemmed Photocatalytic degradation of Congo red using doped zinc oxide nanoparticles
title_short Photocatalytic degradation of Congo red using doped zinc oxide nanoparticles
title_sort photocatalytic degradation of congo red using doped zinc oxide nanoparticles
topic dyes
textile wastewater treatment
zinc oxide nanoparticles
photocatalytic degradation
congo red
url https://eqa.unibo.it/article/view/18803
work_keys_str_mv AT blessingchidinmanwaiwu photocatalyticdegradationofcongoredusingdopedzincoxidenanoparticles
AT emekaemmanueloguzie photocatalyticdegradationofcongoredusingdopedzincoxidenanoparticles
AT christopherchibuzorejiogu photocatalyticdegradationofcongoredusingdopedzincoxidenanoparticles