Biomass porous carbon as the active site to enhance photodegradation of oxytetracycline on mesoporous g-C3N4

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Abstract

Graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4) is widely used in photocatalytic adsorption and degradation of pollutants, but there are still some problems such as low adsorption performance and high electron-hole recombination efficiency. Herein, we propose a new molten salt assisted thermal polycondensation strategy to synthesize biomass porous carbon (BPC) loaded on g-C3N4 composites (designated as BPC/g-C3N4) with a hollow tubular structure, which had a high surface area and low electron-hole recombination rate. The study shows that the morphology of g-C3N4 changes dramatically from massive to hollow tubular by molten salt assisted thermal polycondensation, which provides a base for the loading of BPC, to construct a highly effective composite photocatalyst. BPC loaded on g-C3N4 could be used as the active site to enhance Oxytetracycline (OTC) removal efficiency by adsorption and with higher electron-hole separation efficiency. As a result, the BPC(5%)/g-C3N4 sample presented the highest photocatalytic degradation efficiency (84%) for OTC degradation under visible light irradiation. The adsorption capacity and photocatalytic reaction rate were 3.67 and 5.63 times higher than that of the g-C3N4, respectively. This work provided a new insight for the design of novel composite photocatalysts with high adsorption and photocatalytic performance for the removal of antibiotic pollutants from wastewater.

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Ding, H., Liu, Z., Zhang, Q., He, X., Feng, Q., Wang, D., & Ma, D. (2022). Biomass porous carbon as the active site to enhance photodegradation of oxytetracycline on mesoporous g-C3N4. RSC Advances, 12(3), 1840–1849. https://doi.org/10.1039/d1ra08615d

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