Photocatalytic Active Mesoporous Carbon/ZnO Hybrid Materials from Block Copolymer Tethered ZnO Nanocrystals.
Zongyu WangSiyuan LiuJianan ZhangJiajun YanYepin ZhaoClare MahoneyRachel FerebeeDanli LuoJoanna PietrasikMichael R BockstallerKrzysztof MatyjaszewskiPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2017)
Severe water pollution issues present an important contemporary challenge that drives the development and advancement of efficient and environmentally benign photocatalysts that enable the degradation of pollutants upon visible light irradiation. One example is zinc oxide/carbon (ZnO/C) hybrid materials that have been shown to be effective photocatalysts. To maximize the effectiveness of ZnO/C hybrids, materials with high accessible surface area of ZnO are required. Here, a novel strategy is presented to enable the synthesis of fine dispersions of ZnO nanoparticles within a porous carbon matrix. The synthesis entails the grafting of ZnO nanparticles with polystyrene-b-poly(styrene-co-acrylonitrile) (PS-b-PSAN) block copolymer and subsequent pyrolysis of the material under inert gas (N2) atmosphere. During the pyrolysis process, the PS block effectively prevents agglomeration of ZnO particles, thus resulting in a fine dispersion of ZnO nanocrystals within a prorous C matrix. Materials are found to exhibit a dye adsorption capacity of 125 mg g-1 (from a methylene blue aqueous solution with a concentration of 305 mg L-1) and dye degradation rate constant of 0.021 min-1. The significant increase of effective surface area and degradation efficacy (as compared to ZnO/C synthesized by the pyrolysis of binary PSAN/ZnO blends) is rationalized as a consequence of the increased porosity that promotes dye adsorption and transport within the hybrid material.