4.6 Article

Photophysical and Photocatalytic Properties of BiSnSbO6 under Visible Light Irradiation

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma11040491

Keywords

BiSnSbO6; benzotriazole; rhodamine B; photocatalytic degradation; visible light irradiation

Funding

  1. China-Israel Joint Research Program in Water Technology and Renewable Energy [5]

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BiSnSbO6 with strong photocatalytic activity was first fabricated by a high-temperature, solid-state sintering method. The resulting BiSnSbO6 was characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), UV-vis diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRS) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The results showed that BiSnSbO6, with a pyrochlore structure and a cubic crystal system by a space group Fd3m, was well crystallized. The lattice parameter or the band gap of BiSnSbO6 was 10.234594 angstrom or 2.83 eV. Compared with N-doped TiO2, BiSnSbO6 showed higher photocatalytic activity in the degradation of benzotriazole and rhodamine B. The apparent first-order rate constant for BiSnSbO6 in the degradation of benzotriazole and rhodamine B was 0.0182 min(-1) and 0.0147 min(-1), respectively. On the basis of the scavenger experiment, during the photocatalytic process, the main active species were arranged in order of increasing photodegradation rate: center dot OH < center dot O-2(-) < h(+). The removal rate of benzotriazole or rhodamine B was approximately estimated to be 100% with BiSnSbO6 as a photocatalyst after 200 min visible-light irradiation. Plentiful CO2 produced by the experiment indicated that benzotriazole or rhodamine B was continuously mineralized during the photocatalytic process. Finally, the possible photodegradation pathways of benzotriazole and rhodamine B were deduced.

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