Xiong Zi-Wei, Guo Li-Na, Jiang Hui, Zhang Yue, Gao Qin, Li Jun, Chen Sheng, Li Xin, Javaid Muhammad Asif, Li De-Qiang, Xie Haijiao
College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Xinjiang Agricultural University, Urumchi 830052, Xinjiang, PR China.
College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Xinjiang Agricultural University, Urumchi 830052, Xinjiang, PR China.
Int J Biol Macromol. 2024 Oct;277(Pt 2):134155. doi: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.134155. Epub 2024 Aug 4.
N-doped TiO/carbon composites (N-TiPC) have shown excellent photodegradation performances to the organic contaminants but are limited by the multistage preparation (i.e., preparation of porous carbon, preparation of N-doped TiO, and loading of N-doped TiO on porous carbon). Here, we develop a handy way by combining the Pickering emulsion-gel template route and chelation reaction of polysaccharides. The N-TiPC is obtained by calcinating pectin/Dl-serine hydrazide hydrochloride (SHH)-Ti chelate and is further described by modern characterization techniques. The results show that the N atom is successfully doped into the TiO lattice, and the bandgap value of N-TiPC is reduced to 2.3 eV. Moreover, the particle size of N-TiPC remains about 10 nm. The configurations of the composites are simulated using DFT calculation. The photocatalytic experiments show that N-TiPC has a high removal efficiency for methylene blue (MB) and oxytetracycline hydrochloride (OTC-HCL). The removal ratios of MB (20 mg/L, 50 mL) and OTC-HCL (30 mg/L, 50 mL) are 99.41 % and 78.29 %, respectively. The cyclic experiments show that the photocatalyst has good stability. Overall, this study provides a handy way to form N-TiPC with enhanced photodegradation performances. It can also be promoted to other macromolecules such as cellulose and its derivatives, sodium alginate, chitosan, lignin, etc.