Nitrogen-oxygen defect engineering enhanced intrinsic electric field in CoFe2O4/g-C3N4 heterojunctions for photocatalytic tetracycline degradation and H2 evolution

Wentao Miao, Wei He, Lei Shen, Yuguang Li, Zheng Fang, Zhao Yang, Guo Kai

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

A range of efficient g-C3N4/CoFe2O4 heterojunction with nitrogen deficiencies (NDs) and oxygen deficiencies (ODs) were successfully synthesized through doping-melting and hydrothermal methods. Nitrogen-oxygen defect engineering effectively enhanced the active sites on the catalyst surface and regulated the optical bandgap, band structure, and work function (Φ) of g-C3N4 and CoFe2O4, regulating the strength of the intrinsic electric field (IEF) and promoting the separation of photo-generated carriers at the heterojunction interface. Among the series of samples, CH-H2@CFO-A5 (properly oxalate-doped g-C3N4/CoFe2O4 heterojunctions treated with prolonged annealing) demonstrated remarkable optical properties due to its narrowest optical band gap, while the strongest IEF and redox potential make it has strong carrier dynamics and photocatalytic efficiency. Under visible light, the mineralization rate of tetracycline (TC) on CH-H2@CFO-A5 and the photocatalytic hydrogen production rate were 4.51 times and 2.72 times higher than that of unmodified CN-H0@CFO-A1, respectively. This study aimed to provide an efficient strategy for regulating the IEF within the heterojunction, by altering the Fermi level through multi-element defect engineering.

Original languageEnglish
Article number114202
JournalJournal of Environmental Chemical Engineering
Volume12
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

Keywords

  • Defect engineering
  • Heterojunction
  • Hydrogen evolution
  • Internal electric field (IEF)
  • Photocatalytic degradation

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