Nitrogen-doped lignin-derived carbon for catalytic reduction of hexavalent chromium via HCOOH-mediated hydrogenation†
Abstract
It is highly desirable to explore efficient catalysts for reducing toxic Cr6+ to benign Cr3+ under mild and eco-friendly conditions. This article describes a facile fabrication of nitrogen doped carbon (N@C-g-C3N4) as a metal-free catalyst for Cr6+ reduction using lignin as a carbon source and g-C3N4 nanosheets as a nitrogen source. The structural properties of the N@C-g-C3N4 catalyst are characterized by TEM, HR-TEM, XRD, TGA, Raman, EDS-mapping, XPS and BET techniques. The summation of these analyses sheds light on the high surface area (903 m2 g−1), mesopore size (17.3 nm) and defects (ID/IG = 0.97) of N@C-g-C3N4, which contribute to its excellent catalytic activity in HCOOH-mediated reduction of Cr6+ to Cr3+ with high rate constant (2.98 min−1) and turnover frequency (2.21 molK2Cr2O7 gcatalyst−1 min−1) and complete degradation (100%) within 5 min. The catalytic performance of the catalyst reveals that the reduction activity is significantly dependent on the concentration of Cr6+ and HCOOH, catalyst loading, pH, temperature, and foreign ions. Particularly, the N@C-g-C3N4 catalyst shows superior stability and renewability with little loss of activity (≥95%) after 8 months storage and five repeated uses. Furthermore, N@C-g-C3N4 can be applied in other hydrogenation reactions involving K3[Fe(CN)6], 4-NP and BPA using NaBH4 as a hydrogen donor, and the removal of organic dyes. These findings illustrate that N@C-g-C3N4 as a metal-free catalyst is effective, versatile and eco-friendly for the reduction of Cr6+ from contaminated environments.