Abstract
The sanitary and environmental challenges posed by an ever growing economically and geographically diverse human population include the need for sustainable, inexpensive, scalable, and decentralized water treatment technologies that can supplement or replace conventional treatment methods. These challenges can be met by semiconductor photocatalysis, especially if the process is driven by visible light energy. Visible-light active (VLA) photocatalysis, as opposed to traditional energy-intensive and chemically driven disinfection methods such as ozonation, UV irradiation and chlorination, has the potential for achieving high disinfection efficiency with low energy consumption and no harmful by-products. This technology generates in-situ reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as H2O2, and , without the need for chemicals addition. In turn, ROS are capable of penetrating cell walls and membranes of microorganisms, effectively inactivating them. Although multiple types of VLA photocatalysts have been used experimentally for disinfection of water, noble-metal-based photocatalysts have gained the most interest due to their surface plasma resonance (SPR) effect, which acts synergistically to increase the disinfection potential of the photocatalytic process. This paper is a review of the different types of noble-metal-based VLA photocatalysts used for water disinfection in different experimental settings, their synthesis procedures and disinfection mechanisms. It also discusses innovative approaches to overcome a major hurdle in photocatalysis, that is, the rapid recombination of the electron and hole pair, by including specific dopants into the structure of the photocatalyst.
Highlights
Waterborne diseases have had a detrimental impact on human civilization throughout history
This paper presents a review of the mechanism involved in semiconductor photocatalysis, and examines wavelength utilization for bandgap reduction and other roles played by photocatalysts doped with noble metals NPs in Visible-light active (VLA) photocatalytic disinfection
The challenges can be partially met with the use of semiconductor photocatalysis, if the process is driven by visible light energy
Summary
Waterborne diseases have had a detrimental impact on human civilization throughout history. VLA photocatalytic disinfection is a non-conventional technique that can be scalable and useful in decentralized water and wastewater treatment systems This system employs photocatalysts that are capable of absorbing photons in the visible light spectrum (380 nm or larger), which include a portion of the sunlight reaching Earth surface, and artificial light. If solar light were to be used, the process would be inefficient since the Earth surface receives 8% UV rays, of which 0.5%, 4.5% and 95% correspond to the UVC, UVB and UVA spectrum, respectively [38] To overcome this limitation, modifications to the TiO2 lattice, consisting of doping its structure with either a metal or a non-metal, are necessary to reduce the bandgap width, enable electron-hole pair formation by visible light energy, and prevent recombination of the formed electron-hole pair
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