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      Photocatalytic degradation of rhodamine-B by visible light assisted peroxymonosulfate activation using the Z-scheme MIL-100(Fe)/Bi 2S 3 composite: a combined experimental and theoretical approach

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          Abstract

          MIL-100(Fe)/Bi 2S 3 has excellent activity towards RhB degradation.

          Abstract

          The photocatalytic efficiency of the binary MIL-100(Fe)/Bi 2S 3 (MIL-BS) composite was utilized towards visible light assisted peroxymonosulfate (PMS) activation and degradation of Rhodamine-B (RhB) dye. The binary catalyst, with 10 wt% Bi 2S 3 (MIL-BS(10)), showed improved activity relative to that of only MIL-100(Fe), Bi 2S 3 and sole PMS. Under ambient conditions and neutral pH, 0.025 g l −1 MIL-BS(10) and 0.15 g l −1 PMS generated abundant SO 4˙ , O 2˙ and OH˙ that mineralize 81.4% RhB in the medium, with complete degradation. Surface-bound Fe 2+/Fe 3+ and Bi 3+/Bi 4+ are involved in local redox interconversions to facilitate charge transport and generation of reactive radicals. A first-principles based modeling approach for photocatalytic oxidation, including pore diffusion-surface reaction effects, was employed to simulate the temporal variation of bulk-averaged RhB concentration in the medium. Also, the degradation kinetics, under the influence of various operational parameters, was successfully predicted using the developed model. The determined mass transfer and kinetic parameters, i.e., mass transfer coefficient, effective diffusivity and kinetic rate constant, are useful for prediction of dye concentration and efficiency of the process. An in-depth RhB degradation pathway was designed based on the intermediate analysis and the critical degradation steps were identified. The catalyst showed good reusability for six consecutive cycles. Overall, the MIL-BS catalyst could be employed as a visible light responsive PMS activator to efficiently mineralize typical persistent organic contaminants, i.e., RhB, in aqueous medium.

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          Activation of persulfate (PS) and peroxymonosulfate (PMS) and application for the degradation of emerging contaminants

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            Synthesis and catalytic properties of MIL-100(Fe), an iron(III) carboxylate with large pores.

            The large-pore iron(III) carboxylate MIL-100(Fe) with a zeotype architecture has been isolated under hydrothermal conditions, its structure solved from synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data, while Friedel-Crafts benzylation catalytic tests indicate a high activity and selectivity for MIL-100(Fe).
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              Azo dyes and human health: A review.

              Synthetic azo dyes are widely used in industries. Gerhardt Domagk discovered that the antimicrobial effect of red azo dye Prontosil was caused by the reductively cleaved (azo reduction) product sulfanilamide. The significance of azo reduction is thus revealed. Azo reduction can be accomplished by human intestinal microflora, skin microflora, environmental microorganisms, to a lesser extent by human liver azoreductase, and by nonbiological means. Some azo dyes can be carcinogenic without being cleaved into aromatic amines. However, the carcinogenicity of many azo dyes is due to their cleaved product such as benzidine. Benzidine induces various human and animal tumors. Another azo dye component, p-phenylenediamine, is a contact allergen. Many azo dyes and their reductively cleaved products as well as chemically related aromatic amines are reported to affect human health, causing allergies and other human maladies.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                NJCHE5
                New Journal of Chemistry
                New J. Chem.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                1144-0546
                1369-9261
                June 06 2022
                2022
                : 46
                : 22
                : 10728-10745
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Chemical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, Kharagpur – 721302, India
                [2 ]Department of Chemical Engineering, Heritage Institute of Technology, Kolkata – 700107, India
                Article
                10.1039/D2NJ00497F
                788b1719-8536-4323-93e1-01b50689611b
                © 2022

                http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use

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