A sustainable composite of rice-paper/BaMoO4 nanoparticles for the photocatalytic elimination of the recalcitrant 2,6-dichlorobenzamide (BAM) pesticide in drinking water and its mechanisms of degradation.

Autor: Oliva, Jorge, Valadez-Renteria, Ernesto, Kshetri, Yuwaraj K., Encinas, Armando, Lee, Soo Wohn, Rodriguez-Gonzalez, Vicente
Předmět:
Zdroj: Environmental Science & Pollution Research; Aug2022, Vol. 29 Issue 39, p59915-59929, 15p
Abstrakt: This research reports the use of biodegradable and flexible composites for the removal of the 2,6-dichlorobenzamide (BAM) pesticide from drinking water. Rice paper (a biodegradable substrate) and Ag/BaMoO4 (MOBA) nanoparticles were employed to fabricate these composites. The SEM images showed that the MOBA nanoparticles with sizes of 300–800 nm decorated the surface of the biodegradable substrate and formed porous agglomerates, which have sizes of 1–3 μm. The MOBA powders were dispersed in drinking water polluted with BAM and were exposed to 4 h of UV-VIS irradiation, producing a maximum degradation of 82% for the BAM. Moreover, the flexible and biodegradable rice/MOBA composite produced a maximum removal percentage of 95% for the BAM. Also, we studied the effect of pH of the initial solution utilizing both powders and composites. From here, we found that a pH of 10 leads to a complete degradation of BAM after 4h, while a pH of 3 degraded only 37–47% of BAM for the same reaction time. According to the scavenger experiments, the •OH radical and the h+ were the main oxidizing agents for the BAM. Overall, the biodegradable photocatalytic composites are a reliable and a low-cost alternative to eliminate pesticides from the drinking water and can find application in water purification processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index