Advanced Removal of Dyes with Tuning Carbon/TiO2 Composite Properties

Nanomaterials (Basel). 2024 Feb 3;14(3):309. doi: 10.3390/nano14030309.

Abstract

This study evaluates the removal of several dyes with different charge properties, i.e., anionic (Acid Red 88), cationic (Basic Red 13), and neutral (Basic Red 5) using transition metal-doped TiO2 supported on a high-surface-area activated carbon. Experimental results confirm the successful deposition of TiO2 and the derivatives (Zr-, Cu-, and Ce-doped samples) on the surface of the activated carbon material and the development of extended heterojunctions with improved electronic properties. Incorporating a small percentage of dopants significantly improves the adsorption properties of the composites towards the three dyes evaluated, preferentially for sample AC/TiO2_Zr. Similarly, the photodegradation efficiency highly depends on the nature of the composite evaluated and the characteristics of the dye. Sample AC/TiO2_Zr demonstrates the best overall removal efficiency for Acid Red 88 and Basic Red 5-83% and 63%, respectively. This promising performance must simultaneously be attributed to a dual mechanism, i.e., adsorption and photodegradation. Notably, the AC/TiO2_Ce outperformed the other catalysts in eliminating Basic Red 13 (74%/6 h). A possible Acid Red 88 degradation mechanism using AC/TiO2_Zr was proposed. This study shows that the removal efficiency of AC/TiO2 composites strongly depends on both the material and pollutant.

Keywords: carbon composites; degradation of organic dyes; photocatalysis; textile effluents; water treatment.

Grants and funding

This research was supported by Štefan Schwarz Postdoc Fellowship No. 2022/OV1/010, the Marie Curie Programme H2020-MSCA-RISE-2016-NANOMED No. 734641, and APVV-19-0302 projects. J.S.-A. acknowledges financial support from MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and EU NextGeneration/PRTR (Project PCI2020-111968/ERANET-M/3D-Photocat), MCIN (Project PID2019-108453GB-C21), and Conselleria de Innovación, Universidades, Ciencia y Sociedad Digital, Generalitat Valenciana (Project CIPROM/2021/022).