Oxygen-defective ZnO films with various nanostructures prepared via a rapid one-step process and corresponding photocatalytic degradation applications.

Fiche publication


Date publication

septembre 2018

Journal

Journal of colloid and interface science

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr SCHNEIDER Raphaël


Tous les auteurs :
Yu Z, Moussa H, Ma Y, Liu M, Chouchene B, Schneider R, Moliere M, Liao H

Résumé

The deposition of oxygen-defective ZnO films exhibiting varied nanostructures via Solution Precursor Plasma Spray (SPPS) route, a one-step, minute-scaled duration and large scale method, is reported. The in situ formation of oxygen vacancies in ZnO films was confirmed by UV-Visible, Raman and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy and the as-prepared samples exhibit a bandgap as low as 3.02 eV. Density functional theory (DFT) simulation demonstrates that the polarization of ZnO is enhanced by the created oxygen vacancies, leading to substantially improved photocatalytic activity. The comparative experiments also revealed that forming and preserving appropriate ZnO precursor clusters inside the plasma plume is requisite for obtaining propitious ZnO nanostructures, which was followed by the in situ transfer and growth of the clusters on the preheated substrate. The ZnO-NRs films fully degrade the aqueous Orange II dye solutions within 120 min and maintain a quasi-intact activity (95.8% retention) after five test runs, which highlight their good stability. The oxygen vacancies and the narrowing of the bandgap also enable a visible light-driven photodegradation activity with conversions as high as 54.1%. In summary, this work not only reveals that the photocatalytic activity of SPPS-deposited ZnO films benefit from oxygen vacancies and well nanostructures, but also suggests that the SPPS route is of high potential for preparing metal oxides films destined to functional applications.

Mots clés

First principle calculation, Nanostructures, Oxygen vacancies, Photocatalytic degradation, Solution precursor plasma spray, ZnO films

Référence

J Colloid Interface Sci. 2018 Sep 19;534:637-648