Controllable drilling by corrosive Cu1Ox to access highly accessible single-site catalysts for bacterial disinfection

Xiao Ge, Sheng Song Yu, Rui Fen Cheng, Wenxing Chen, Fangyao Zhou, Kuang Liang, Jie Jie Chen*, Han Qing Yu, Yuen Wu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Precise modulation of local structure will improve the catalytic performance for single-site catalysts (SSCs), by taming electronic structure of supported metals and impacting the adsorption energy of reaction intermediates. In order to modify and strengthen the metal-support interaction, a controllable drilling process induced by atomic Cu1Ox is presented for fabrication of accessible SSCs. First, the bulk Cu2O was thermally driven to migrate and diffuse within the tangent graphene oxide membranes (GOM) interface, drilling plenty of channels in the GOM. Then, the volatile and atomic Cu1Ox species would diffuse through the corroded channels. At last, the Cu1Ox species with strong causticity would corrode the C-N support by breaking the Cu-O bonds and releasing CO2. Hence, the atomic Cu species were eventually anchored in the C-N support by coordination with dangling N-rich defects, forming the Cu SSCs. The fabricated Cu SSCs exhibited an excellent performance in sterilizing bacteria. As our results displayed, Escherichia coli (E. coli.) was almost sterilized by Cu SSCs via activating persulfate. Compared to the traditional approaches employed by wastewater treatment plant, our Cu SSCs exhibit much better antibacterial effect, holding a great potential for practical bacterial disinfection.

Original languageEnglish
Article number120228
JournalApplied Catalysis B: Environmental
Volume293
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Sept 2021

Keywords

  • Bacterial disinfection
  • Escherichia coli
  • Graphene oxide membranes
  • Selective adsorption
  • Single site catalysts

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