Abstract

Organic dye contamination, emanating from pharmaceutical, paper, and textile industries into water resources, severely threatens marine and human life even at low concentrations. Photocatalysis is one of the most important remediation techniques that decolorize water by employing the power of light. In this work, the development of floated beads of Sodium Alginate/hydroxyethyl methacrylate (Alg-g-HEMA) encompass graphene oxide (GO) decorated Zinc oxide (ZnO) utilizing ionizing radiation was designed to function as a photocatalyst when exposed to visible light. Floatability was induced using calcium carbonate. GO was sonochemically decorated with ZnO nanoparticles and the yield was characterized using XRD, FTIR, TEM, SEM, and EDX techniques. Optical characteristics of the developed nanostructure were performed using UV–Vis spectrophotometry. The photocatalytic activity of the floated (Alg-g-HEMA)-ZnO@GO beads was assessed for the photo decolorization of methylene blue dye (MB) under visible light. The upshot of operational factors such as photocatalyst dose, pH, initial dye concentration, and irradiation time on the decolorization of MB was examined. It was observed that 1 g of the developed (Alg-g-HEMA)-ZnO@GO photocatalyst was able to decolorize 1000 ml of 20 ppm of MB within 150 min at pH 9. In terms of kinetics, photo-decolorization follows Langmuir Hinshelwood pseudo-first order.

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