Engineering atomic metal active sites on polymeric carbon nitride for photocatalytic antibiotics treatment

Antibiotic resistance remains as one of the biggest threats to global health, food security, and development today, hence the demand for a novel water treatment process. This project aims to improve antibiotics treatment process via heterogeneous photocatalysis method by doping Iron on the Polymeric...

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Main Author: Loh, Hong Yi
Other Authors: Liu Zheng
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/166669
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1666692023-05-13T16:46:24Z Engineering atomic metal active sites on polymeric carbon nitride for photocatalytic antibiotics treatment Loh, Hong Yi Liu Zheng School of Materials Science and Engineering A*STAR, IMRE Jiang Wenbin Z.Liu@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Materials Antibiotic resistance remains as one of the biggest threats to global health, food security, and development today, hence the demand for a novel water treatment process. This project aims to improve antibiotics treatment process via heterogeneous photocatalysis method by doping Iron on the Polymeric Carbon Nitride (PCN) catalyst, as well as investigate its photocatalytic mechanism. Currently, Advanced Oxidation Processes (AOP) based photocatalytic degradation face multiple efficiency challenges such as high surface recombination rates of excitons, low light absorption and short lifetime of photogenerated electrons. Herein, iron doped PCN (Fe-PCN) is synthesized using a one-pot method and its photocatalytic performance is tested using tetracycline (TC) as the organic pollutant. Despite retaining the same nanostructure as the pristine PCN, it is revealed that Fe-PCN shows enhanced photodegradation with a more extensive removal of Tetracycline TC. A typical AOP reaction pathway includes generation of highly Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) such as hydroxyl radicals (•OH) and superoxide anion (•O2-) to break down organic pollutants to non-toxic intermediates. Remarkably, Fe-PCN demonstrated no ROS production to achieve efficient TC decomposition. Thus, a possible reaction mechanism responsible for such a phenomenon was proposed. Bachelor of Engineering (Materials Engineering) 2023-05-09T01:29:13Z 2023-05-09T01:29:13Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Loh, H. Y. (2023). Engineering atomic metal active sites on polymeric carbon nitride for photocatalytic antibiotics treatment. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/166669 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/166669 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Materials
spellingShingle Engineering::Materials
Loh, Hong Yi
Engineering atomic metal active sites on polymeric carbon nitride for photocatalytic antibiotics treatment
description Antibiotic resistance remains as one of the biggest threats to global health, food security, and development today, hence the demand for a novel water treatment process. This project aims to improve antibiotics treatment process via heterogeneous photocatalysis method by doping Iron on the Polymeric Carbon Nitride (PCN) catalyst, as well as investigate its photocatalytic mechanism. Currently, Advanced Oxidation Processes (AOP) based photocatalytic degradation face multiple efficiency challenges such as high surface recombination rates of excitons, low light absorption and short lifetime of photogenerated electrons. Herein, iron doped PCN (Fe-PCN) is synthesized using a one-pot method and its photocatalytic performance is tested using tetracycline (TC) as the organic pollutant. Despite retaining the same nanostructure as the pristine PCN, it is revealed that Fe-PCN shows enhanced photodegradation with a more extensive removal of Tetracycline TC. A typical AOP reaction pathway includes generation of highly Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) such as hydroxyl radicals (•OH) and superoxide anion (•O2-) to break down organic pollutants to non-toxic intermediates. Remarkably, Fe-PCN demonstrated no ROS production to achieve efficient TC decomposition. Thus, a possible reaction mechanism responsible for such a phenomenon was proposed.
author2 Liu Zheng
author_facet Liu Zheng
Loh, Hong Yi
format Final Year Project
author Loh, Hong Yi
author_sort Loh, Hong Yi
title Engineering atomic metal active sites on polymeric carbon nitride for photocatalytic antibiotics treatment
title_short Engineering atomic metal active sites on polymeric carbon nitride for photocatalytic antibiotics treatment
title_full Engineering atomic metal active sites on polymeric carbon nitride for photocatalytic antibiotics treatment
title_fullStr Engineering atomic metal active sites on polymeric carbon nitride for photocatalytic antibiotics treatment
title_full_unstemmed Engineering atomic metal active sites on polymeric carbon nitride for photocatalytic antibiotics treatment
title_sort engineering atomic metal active sites on polymeric carbon nitride for photocatalytic antibiotics treatment
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/166669
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