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Biosynthesized Metallic Nanoarchitecture for Photocatalytic Degradation of Emerging Organochlorine and Organophosphate Pollutants: A Review. / Emmanuel, Stephen Sunday; Idris, Mustapha Omenesa; Olawoyin, Christopher Olusola et al.

In: ChemistrySelect, Vol. 9, No. 14, e202304956, 12.04.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Emmanuel, SS, Idris, MO, Olawoyin, CO, Adesibikan, AA, Aliyu, AA & Suleiman, AI 2024, 'Biosynthesized Metallic Nanoarchitecture for Photocatalytic Degradation of Emerging Organochlorine and Organophosphate Pollutants: A Review', ChemistrySelect, vol. 9, no. 14, e202304956. https://doi.org/10.1002/slct.202304956

APA

Emmanuel, S. S., Idris, M. O., Olawoyin, C. O., Adesibikan, A. A., Aliyu, A. A., & Suleiman, A. I. (2024). Biosynthesized Metallic Nanoarchitecture for Photocatalytic Degradation of Emerging Organochlorine and Organophosphate Pollutants: A Review. ChemistrySelect, 9(14), [e202304956]. https://doi.org/10.1002/slct.202304956

Vancouver

Emmanuel SS, Idris MO, Olawoyin CO, Adesibikan AA, Aliyu AA, Suleiman AI. Biosynthesized Metallic Nanoarchitecture for Photocatalytic Degradation of Emerging Organochlorine and Organophosphate Pollutants: A Review. ChemistrySelect. 2024 Apr 12;9(14):e202304956. doi: 10.1002/slct.202304956

Author

Emmanuel, Stephen Sunday ; Idris, Mustapha Omenesa ; Olawoyin, Christopher Olusola et al. / Biosynthesized Metallic Nanoarchitecture for Photocatalytic Degradation of Emerging Organochlorine and Organophosphate Pollutants: A Review. In: ChemistrySelect. 2024 ; Vol. 9, No. 14.

BibTeX

@article{4497c50470ab492aaa5b8fe578754d85,
title = "Biosynthesized Metallic Nanoarchitecture for Photocatalytic Degradation of Emerging Organochlorine and Organophosphate Pollutants: A Review",
abstract = "The use of efficacious and cost-effective pesticides (OP and OC) has undoubtedly proven to be a blessing and a baron because these pesticides are safeguarding the world from food insecurity. Unfortunately, their presence in aquatic bodies brings about an upsurge in water pollution. Amazingly, the photocatalytic degradation approach utilizing biogenic nanoparticles (BNPs) is a trendy state-of-the-art approach and has been established to be a sustainable methodology for the complete mineralization of contaminants into harmless molecules. Thus, this work holistically explores the use of BNPs for photocatalytic degradation of OP and OC. Based on the review, it was found that the least amount of time needed for degradation was less than 5 minutes, while the maximum degradation efficiency was >80 %. The dominant radicals participating in the degradation are ⋅OH and O2⋅ and this radical dominance was enhanced by the oxygenated functional groups present in the biogenic entities employed for the biosynthesis of BNPs. The photocatalytic degradation data fits the pseudo-first-order and Langmuir isotherm models (R2 > 0.9), which indicates that the main adsorption mechanisms involved during electron-hole pair formation and photocatalytic degradation are physisorption and monolayer at the surface of the BNPs. BNPs can sustain a >80 % degradation efficiency for approximately 5 cycles and are reusable for up to 8 cycles. It was also revealed that plants constitute 80 % of the engaged biogenic entities for BNP synthesis. Ultimately, this work offers novel avenues and future research hotspots that might accelerate the use of BNPs for sustainable agricultural and wastewater management practices.",
keywords = "Biogenic nanoparticles, organochlorine pesticides, organophosphate, photodegradation kinetics, recyclability",
author = "Emmanuel, {Stephen Sunday} and Idris, {Mustapha Omenesa} and Olawoyin, {Christopher Olusola} and Adesibikan, {Ademidun Adeola} and Aliyu, {Abdulbasit A.} and Suleiman, {Abdulrahman Itopa}",
year = "2024",
month = apr,
day = "12",
doi = "10.1002/slct.202304956",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "ChemistrySelect",
issn = "2365-6549",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "14",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Biosynthesized Metallic Nanoarchitecture for Photocatalytic Degradation of Emerging Organochlorine and Organophosphate Pollutants: A Review

AU - Emmanuel, Stephen Sunday

AU - Idris, Mustapha Omenesa

AU - Olawoyin, Christopher Olusola

AU - Adesibikan, Ademidun Adeola

AU - Aliyu, Abdulbasit A.

AU - Suleiman, Abdulrahman Itopa

PY - 2024/4/12

Y1 - 2024/4/12

N2 - The use of efficacious and cost-effective pesticides (OP and OC) has undoubtedly proven to be a blessing and a baron because these pesticides are safeguarding the world from food insecurity. Unfortunately, their presence in aquatic bodies brings about an upsurge in water pollution. Amazingly, the photocatalytic degradation approach utilizing biogenic nanoparticles (BNPs) is a trendy state-of-the-art approach and has been established to be a sustainable methodology for the complete mineralization of contaminants into harmless molecules. Thus, this work holistically explores the use of BNPs for photocatalytic degradation of OP and OC. Based on the review, it was found that the least amount of time needed for degradation was less than 5 minutes, while the maximum degradation efficiency was >80 %. The dominant radicals participating in the degradation are ⋅OH and O2⋅ and this radical dominance was enhanced by the oxygenated functional groups present in the biogenic entities employed for the biosynthesis of BNPs. The photocatalytic degradation data fits the pseudo-first-order and Langmuir isotherm models (R2 > 0.9), which indicates that the main adsorption mechanisms involved during electron-hole pair formation and photocatalytic degradation are physisorption and monolayer at the surface of the BNPs. BNPs can sustain a >80 % degradation efficiency for approximately 5 cycles and are reusable for up to 8 cycles. It was also revealed that plants constitute 80 % of the engaged biogenic entities for BNP synthesis. Ultimately, this work offers novel avenues and future research hotspots that might accelerate the use of BNPs for sustainable agricultural and wastewater management practices.

AB - The use of efficacious and cost-effective pesticides (OP and OC) has undoubtedly proven to be a blessing and a baron because these pesticides are safeguarding the world from food insecurity. Unfortunately, their presence in aquatic bodies brings about an upsurge in water pollution. Amazingly, the photocatalytic degradation approach utilizing biogenic nanoparticles (BNPs) is a trendy state-of-the-art approach and has been established to be a sustainable methodology for the complete mineralization of contaminants into harmless molecules. Thus, this work holistically explores the use of BNPs for photocatalytic degradation of OP and OC. Based on the review, it was found that the least amount of time needed for degradation was less than 5 minutes, while the maximum degradation efficiency was >80 %. The dominant radicals participating in the degradation are ⋅OH and O2⋅ and this radical dominance was enhanced by the oxygenated functional groups present in the biogenic entities employed for the biosynthesis of BNPs. The photocatalytic degradation data fits the pseudo-first-order and Langmuir isotherm models (R2 > 0.9), which indicates that the main adsorption mechanisms involved during electron-hole pair formation and photocatalytic degradation are physisorption and monolayer at the surface of the BNPs. BNPs can sustain a >80 % degradation efficiency for approximately 5 cycles and are reusable for up to 8 cycles. It was also revealed that plants constitute 80 % of the engaged biogenic entities for BNP synthesis. Ultimately, this work offers novel avenues and future research hotspots that might accelerate the use of BNPs for sustainable agricultural and wastewater management practices.

KW - Biogenic nanoparticles

KW - organochlorine pesticides

KW - organophosphate

KW - photodegradation kinetics

KW - recyclability

UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/display.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85189374766&origin=inward&txGid=460c4e32a39b6ab466f510f5ba23b8af

UR - https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001197426200001

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/73a430cb-e1e8-39db-a797-d4a6b6d61201/

U2 - 10.1002/slct.202304956

DO - 10.1002/slct.202304956

M3 - Article

VL - 9

JO - ChemistrySelect

JF - ChemistrySelect

SN - 2365-6549

IS - 14

M1 - e202304956

ER -

ID: 61254879