Abstract

The conventional methods for the synthesis of zinc ferrite (ZnFe2O4) basically require high temperature calcination oxidation step, which produces environmentally unfriendly high energy consumption and may produce harmful gases that pollute the atmosphere, as well as the calcination synthesis limits the application of ZnFe2O4 such as preparation of organic composite materials. To end this, by adding carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) to the reaction system, homogeneous litchi-like ZnFe2O4/CMC nanoparticles were successfully synthesized without alkali and calcination in this paper. The rich carboxyl group of CMC is conducive to the chelation and fixation of metal ions in the reaction precursor, which greatly promotes the synthesis of ZnFe2O4. The synthesized particle size is ~100 nm, with obvious ZnFe2O4 diffraction peaks and good crystallinity. The photocatalytic performance of the synthesized photocatalyst was evaluated by visible light-Fenton-like method. With the activation of peroxymonosulfate (PMS), 80.27 % of tetracycline hydrochloride (TC) was degraded in just 18 min, suggesting that the synthesized catalyst had an excellent photocatalytic performance. After four cycles, the catalyst still could degrade 64.52 % TC. And the same behavior in XRD and FTIR spectra confirms the stability of the photocatalyst. In addition, it was determined that singlet oxygen (1O2) dominated the visible light catalytic degradation.

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