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Solar-driven photoelectrocatalytic degradation of anticancer drugs using TiO 2 nanotubes decorated with SnS quantum dots.

Paweł MazierskiPatrycja WilczewskaWojciech LisowskiTomasz KlimczukAnna Białk-BielińskaAdriana Zaleska-MedynskaEwa M SiedleckaAleksandra Pieczyńska
Published in: Dalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003) (2022)
In recent years, the growing interest in applying photoelectrocatalysis (PEC) to decompose organic pollutants has resulted in the need to search for new photoelectrode materials with high activity under visible light radiation. The presented research showed an increased photoelectrocatalytic activity under sunlight of Ti/TiO 2 sensitized with SnS quantum dots, obtained by the successive ionic layer adsorption and reaction (SILAR) method. The presence of SnS caused the enhanced absorption of visible irradiation and the reduction of recombination of generated charges by a p-n heterojunction created with the TiO 2 . The highest efficiency of photoelectrocatalytic degradation of anticancer drugs (ifosfamide, 5-fluorouracil, imatinib) was achieved for the SnS-Ti/TiO 2 photoelectrode with a SnS quantum dot size from 4 to 10 nm. In addition, a decrease of IF PEC degradation efficiency was observed with increasing pH and with the presence of Cl - , NO 3 - , HCO 3 - and organic matter in the treated solution. Studies of the PEC mechanism have shown that drug degradation occurs mainly as a result of the direct and indirect action of photogenerated holes on the SnS-Ti/TiO 2 photoelectrode, and the identified degradation products allowed for the presentation of the degradation pathway of IF, 5-FU and IMB. Duckweed ( Lemna minor ) growth inhibition tests showed no toxicity of the drug solutions after treatment.
Keyphrases
  • visible light
  • quantum dots
  • sensitive detection
  • organic matter
  • dna damage
  • photodynamic therapy
  • oxidative stress
  • drug induced
  • case report
  • radiation therapy
  • ionic liquid
  • radiation induced
  • highly efficient