Novel microwave assisted synthesis of ZnS nanomaterials

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Abstract

A novel ambient pressure microwave assisted technique is developed in which silver and indium-modified ZnS is synthesized. The as-prepared ZnS is characterized by x-ray diffraction, UV-vis spectroscopy, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and luminescence spectroscopy. This procedure produced crystalline materials with particle sizes below 10 nm. The synthesis technique leads to defects in the crystal which induce mid-energy levels in the band gap and lead to indoor light photocatalytic activity. Increasing the amount of silver causes a phase transition from cubic blende to hexagonal phase ZnS. In a comparative study, when the ZnS cubic blende is heated in a conventional chamber furnace, it is completely converted to ZnO at 600 °C. Both cubic blende and hexagonal ZnS show excellent photocatalytic activity under irradiation from a 60 W light bulb. These ZnS samples also show significantly higher photocatalytic activity than the commercially available TiO2 (Evonik-Degussa P-25). © 2013 IOP Publishing Ltd.

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Synnott, D. W., Seery, M. K., Hinder, S. J., Colreavy, J., & Pillai, S. C. (2013). Novel microwave assisted synthesis of ZnS nanomaterials. Nanotechnology, 24(4). https://doi.org/10.1088/0957-4484/24/4/045704

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