Aqueous Oxytetracycline and Norfloxacin Sonocatalytic Degradation in the Presence of Peroxydisulfate with Multilayer Sheet-Like Zinc Oxide

Water Oxytetracycline 02 engineering and technology Zinc Oxide 0210 nano-technology Catalysis Norfloxacin
DOI: 10.1166/jnn.2021.19024 Publication Date: 2021-01-06T13:54:34Z
ABSTRACT
Multilayer ZnO sheet-like flakes were synthesized by a simple method of precipitation and characterized by the techniques of X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). The findings are proven that the SEM images show the overall morphology of a single sheet-like ZnO nanostructure made from uniformly thick nano-sheets. In an aqueous environment, the acoustic ability of the prepared material was assessed using ultrasound (US) radiation to degrade oxytetracycline (OTC) and norfloxacin (NF). To increase the degradation efficiency, a US/ZnO/peroxodisulfate system was developed by introducing ammonium persulfate ((NH4)2S2O8) and sodium persulfate (Na2S2O8), exhibiting excellent synergistic effects. Result show the decomposition efficiency for NF removal with Na2S2O8 (64%) appeared to be slightly better than with (NH4)2S2O8 (56%). By contrast, the ultrasonic catalytic efficiency of Na2S2O8 (98%) was slightly better than that of (NH4)2S2O8 (94%) for OTC removal. The addition of scavengers to the US/ZnO/peroxodisulfate system through the NF and OTC results in the largest effect of holes. The degradation is considered to be often caused by holes. In this system, the Na2S2O8 can have two roles to increase the rate of degradation: (1) The SO4− formed by Na2S2O8 under ultrasonic irradiation directly degraded to norfloxacin on ZnO surface; and (2) S2O82- behaved as an electron acceptor, inhibiting recombination of electron hole pairs, enabling the development of more ·OH. Therefore, the synergistic effect significantly increases US/ZnO/peroxodisulfate sonocatalytic activity (Hu, S.B., et al., 2017. Aqueous norfloxacin sonocatalytic degradation with multilayer flower-like ZnO in the presence of peroxydisulfate. Ultrasonics Sonochemistry, 38(1), pp.446–454).
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