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Hollow cavity engineering of MOFs-derived hierarchical MnOx structure for highly efficient photothermal degradation of ethyl acetate under light irradiation.

Authors :
Li, Jun
Mo, Shengpeng
Ding, Xuegang
Huang, Lili
Zhou, Xiaobin
Fan, Yinming
Zhang, Yanan
Fu, Mingming
Xie, Qinglin
Ye, Daiqi
Source :
Chemical Engineering Journal. May2023, Vol. 464, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

[Display omitted] • A cavity engineering strategy was introduced to be synthesize MOFs-derived MnO x. • The MnO x -100 catalyst exhibited best ethyl acetate degradation under light irradiation. • Hollow structure could improve the carrier separation and light absorption capacity. • More exposed Mn4+ sites provided abundant adsorption sites and narrower band gap. • The introduction of light would change the degradation pathways of ethyl acetate. The designed synthesis of hollow-structure catalysts is central for enhancing the absorption and utilization of light irradiation, which is the core process of improved photothermal catalytic activity of VOCs. Herein, we introduced a viable cavity engineering for the fabrication of hollow MnO x -m architectures with a well-defined central space by in situ polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP)-assisted Mn-BTC self-aggregation. The optimized MnO x -100 catalyst with hollow cavity environment exhibited approximately 96% ethyl acetate degradation toward CO 2 , stability and moisture resistance under light irradiation, which was much better than the traditional Mn-based MOFs derivatives (MOF-74-O and MIL-100-O). Combined experiment and DFT calculations, the more exposed Mn4+ sites in the MnO x -100 catalyst through a hollow cavity engineering could provide abundant adsorption sites, lower temperature reducibility and narrower band gap, and its hollow structure endowed with significant advantages for the separation efficiency of photogenerated carriers and light absorption capacity. Moreover, coexistence of photocatalysis, thermocatalysis and photoactivation in this catalyst system synergistically participated in the light-driven photothermal catalytic ethyl acetate oxidation. Finally, in situ DRIFTS results revealed that the introduction of light could change the possible reaction pathway of ethyl acetate degradation over the MnO x -100 catalyst, and aldehyde and ethylene were generated as by-products or non-critical intermediates under light irradiation. The main degradation pathway of ethyl acetate degradation occurred through ethyl acetate → aldehyde, ethanol and acetic acid → methanol and formic acid → CO 2 and H 2 O. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13858947
Volume :
464
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemical Engineering Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163422841
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2023.142412