Experimental and computational studies of metals doped α/β-PbO nanoparticles and lead oxide thin films for photocatalytic application
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Abstract
Photocatalysts are promising materials to suppress the environmental pollution and energy
crisis encountered in the world. In this research, undoped and different metals (Sn, Co, Cu, Ni,
and Li) doped α-PbO and β-PbO phases nanoparticles were successfully synthesized by a facile
chemical precipitations method and utilized for the degradation of Methylene blue dye under
visible light irradiation. The synthesized nanoparticles were further studied by using different
characterization techniques. The XRD results confirmed that the prepared nanoparticles were
pure α-PbO and β-PbO phases that are free of the mixture of the two and other PbO phases. The
obtained optical band gaps from UV-Vis DRS analysis were 2.03 eV, 2.68 eV, 1.61 eV, 1.78 eV,
1.67 eV, and 2.00 eV for pristine α-PbO, Sn, Co, Cu, Ni, and Li doped α-PbO respectively. For
pristine β-PbO, Co, Cu, Ni, Li, and Sn doped β-PbO, the obtained band gap was 2.68 eV, 1.88
eV, 2.01 eV, 2.65 eV, 2.64 eV, and 2.70 eV respectively. The results from the PL emission reveals
that, the lowest PL intensity of the doped samples indicated the low recombination of the
electron-hole pairs that improved the photocatalytic performance of pristine α-PbO and β-PbO
nanoparticles. The SEM and EDX were used to analyze the surface morphology and composition
of the synthesized nanoparticles, respectively. The photocatalytic activities of the prepared
nanoparticles were assessed through the degradation of the Methylene Blue (MB) dye under
visible light irradiation. The UV-Visible spectrophotometer analysis showed that the MB dye
concentration decreased as the irradiation time varied from 0 to 100 min for α-PbO and from 0
to 80 min for β-PbO. The results show that within 100 minutes, the Sn-doped α-PbO
nanoparticles possessed the maximum degradation efficiency compared to other metal-doped α PbO nanoparticles, with 100% MB dye degradation compared to 94.76 % by pristine α-PbO.
This is attributed to the broader light harvesting in the visible region to facilitate in
photocatalytic degradation of MB dye. All doped β-PbO nanoparticles exhibit enhanced
photocatalytic activity compared to pristine β-PbO towards the degradation of MB dye under
visible light irradiation. In particular, Cu and Co-doped β-PbO exhibit 99.45% and 99.39%
degradation rates of MB dye after 80 min of irradiation, respectively, whereas pristine β-PbO
exhibit only 75.13%. After doping, the band gap narrowing, formation of impurity states,
enhanced specific surface area, higher carrier concentration, reduced carriers recombination,
surface roughness, the action of dopant ions, and microstructural changes in the catalyst aspects
are enhanced the photocatalytic activity of pristine β-PbO. Additionally, PbO thin films with
nanorods, nanosheets, and cauliflower-shaped were produced using a one-step chemical
synthesis approach by just varying the cation concentrations to identify PbO phases. Density
functional theory (DFT) is also used to characterize the material's properties for photocatalysis
applications. The obtained indirect bandgap, the impurity level induces the bandgap narrowing,
enhanced optical properties, and the decrease of effective masses of photogenerated carriers in
the DFT study of different metal doped α-PbO and β-PbO shows the trends of improvement of
photocatalytic performance. The indirect bandgap property is indicated by the calculation of
electronic band structure, with spin-up bandgap values of 2.28 eV, 0.68 eV, 1.01 eV, 1.57 eV,
1.79 eV, and 1.76 eV for pristine, Co, Ni, Cu, Li, and Sn doped β-PbO, respectively by using
PBE exchange functional. The bandgap values of 1.75 eV, 1.14 eV, 1.36 eV, 1.30 eV, 1.57 eV,
and 1.53 eV were also obtained for pristine, Co, Ni, Cu, Li, and Sn-doped α-PbO, respectively
using the same method. The DFT result provides in-depth functional characteristics for guiding
laboratory working experiments and the applications of the materials in various fields such as
photocatalysis, energy storage, and solar cells.
