Advanced oxidation processes using porphyrin-based heterogeneous catalysts hold promise for removing hazardous pollutants from wastewater. Their high visible-light absorption coefficients enable absorption of light from the solar spectrum. Moreover, their conjugated aromatic skeletons and intrinsic electronic properties facilitate the delocalization of photogenerated electrons during photodegradation. Delaying the recombination of photogenerated electron–hole pairs by introducing specific materials increases efficiency, as separated charges have more time to participate in redox reactions, boosting photocatalytic activities. However, applying these photocatalysts for wastewater treatment is challenging owing to facile agglomeration, deactivation, and recovery of the photocatalyst for reuse, which can significantly increase the overall cost. Therefore, new photocatalytic systems comprising porphyrin molecules must be developed. For this purpose, porphyrins can be conjugated to nanomaterials to create hybrid materials with photocatalytic efficiencies superior to those of free-standing starting porphyrins. Various transition metal oxides (TiO2, ZnO, and Fe3O4) nanoparticles, main-group-element oxides (Al2O3 and SiO2) nanoparticles, metal plasmons (silver nanoparticles), carbon-based platforms (graphene, graphene oxide, and g-C3N4), and polymer matrices have been used as nanostructured solid supports for the successful fabrication of porphyrin-conjugated hybrid materials. The conjugation of porphyrin molecules to solid supports improves the photocatalytic degradation activity in terms of visible-light conversion ability, recyclability, active porous sites, substrate mobility, separation of photogenerated charge species, recovery for reuse, and chemical stability, along with preventing the generation of secondary pollution. This review discusses the ongoing development of porphyrin-conjugated hybrid nanomaterials for the heterogeneous photocatalytic degradation of organic dyes, pharmaceutical pollutants, heavy metals, pesticides, and human care in water. Several important results and advancements in the field allow for a more efficient wastewater remediation process.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Nirmal K. Shee
Hee-Joon Kim
Applied Sciences
Kumoh National Institute of Technology
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Shee et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/698586238f7c464f2300a205 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/app16031557