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Adsorption and photocatalytic properties of NiO nanoparticles synthesized via a thermal decomposition process

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Martha Ramesh*
Affiliation:
Materials Research Lab, Department of Physics, National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal, Mangalore-575 025, India
Martha Purna Chander Rao
Affiliation:
Nanomaterials and Solar Energy Conversion Lab, Department of Chemistry, National Institute of Technology, Trichy-620015, India
Sambandam Anandan
Affiliation:
Nanomaterials and Solar Energy Conversion Lab, Department of Chemistry, National Institute of Technology, Trichy-620015, India
Hosakoppa Nagaraja*
Affiliation:
Materials Research Lab, Department of Physics, National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal, Mangalore-575 025, India
*
a) Address all correspondence to these authors. e-mail: ramesh.martha09@gmail.com

Abstract

NiO nanoparticles (NPs) were synthesized at different annealing temperatures via a thermal decomposition process and characterized using X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, and UV-vis spectroscopy. The NiO NPs prepared at higher annealing temperature (400 °C) were shown excellent adsorption and photocatalytic activity toward textile dyes reactive black 5 (RB-5) and methylene blue (MB). About 87.2% of RB-5 in 60 min and 70.2% of MB in 5 h was removed using NiO NPs synthesized at 400 °C. The photocatalytic degradation of MB was found to increase with an increase in the annealing temperature of the catalyst. Moreover, the kinetic study revealed that the adsorption and photocatalytic activity of NiO NPs followed the second and first-order kinetics, respectively. The enhanced performance of NiO NPs toward dye removal might be related to its optical and structural properties.

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Article
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Copyright © Materials Research Society 2018 
Figure 0

FIG. 1. XRD of the NiO NPs at different annealing temperatures (200–400 °C).

Figure 1

TABLE I. The optical and structural parameters of NiO NPs (where d—mean size of the crystallite, D—average particle diameter, and SA—surface area).

Figure 2

FIG. 2. (a) UV-visible absorption spectra and (b) band gap energy (Eg) of the NiO NPs at different annealing temperatures.

Figure 3

FIG. 3. Micrographs of the NiO NPs at different temperatures of (a) 200 °C, (b) 300 °C, and (c) 400 °C.

Figure 4

FIG. 4. UV-visible absorption spectra for the catalysis of RB-5 and MB over NiO NPs annealed at different temperatures of 200 °C, 300 °C, and 400 °C. The concentration of the (RB-5 and MB) dye in the experiment is 30 µM, pH = 5, and dosage of the NiO (0.2 M of NaOH and 0.1 M of NiNO3·6H2O) is 30 mg.

Figure 5

FIG. 5. (a) Effect of annealing temperature of NiO NPs on RB-5 removal efficiency, (b) NiO NPs were tested for the MB removal efficiency (annealing temperature of sample is 400 °C) and the inset of this figure shows UV-visible absorption spectra for the adsorption of MB over NiO NPs in the absence of visible light, and (c) comparative analysis of MB degradation efficiency over NiO NPs in the presence of visible light.

Figure 6

TABLE II. Comparison of RB-5 removal of NiO NPs by adsorption with reported literature values.

Figure 7

TABLE III. Evaluation of photocatalytic degradation of MB dye with reported literature data.

Figure 8

FIG. 6. Schematic representation of the adsorption (left) and photocatalytic process (right) on the surface of NiO NPs using RB-5 dye without irradiation and MB dye with visible light irradiation, respectively.

Figure 9

FIG. 7. Shows that the (upper) adsorption follows perfectly the pseudo-second-order kinetic with respect to RB-5 concentrations without irradiation and (lower-trials) photocatalytic degradation follows perfectly the pseudo-first-order kinetic with respect to MB concentrations with irradiation.

Figure 10

TABLE IV. Kinetic constants for dye RB-5 removal on NiO NPs.

Figure 11

TABLE V. Kinetic constants for dye MB degradation on NiO NPs.

Figure 12

TABLE VI. Comparison of rate constant (k) and correlation coefficient (R2) values with literature reported values for the removal of dyes.