Affiliations 

  • 1 Department of Physics, Bauchi State University, Gadau PMB 65 Gadau Bauchi Nigeria yitas@basug.edu.ng
  • 2 Department of Physics Faculty of Science, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia Malaysia
  • 3 Department of Physics, Farook College (Autonomous) Kozhikode 673632 India
  • 4 Department of Chemistry, College of Science, King Khalid University Abha 62529 Saudi Arabia
  • 5 Department of Physics, American International University-Bangladesh (AIUB) 408/1, Kuratoli, Khilkhet Dhaka 1229 Bangladesh
  • 6 Centre for Applied Physics and Radiation Technologies, School of Engineering and Technology, Sunway University Bandar Sunway 47500 Selangor Malaysia mu_khandaker@yahoo.com
RSC Adv, 2023 Aug 04;13(34):23659-23668.
PMID: 37564254 DOI: 10.1039/d3ra03838f

Abstract

This work investigates the structural, elastic, electronic, and photoabsorption properties of boron- (N-deficient) and nitrogen- (B-deficient) doped single-walled boron nitride nanotube (SWBNNT) for photocatalytic applications for the first time. All calculations of the optimized systems were performed with DFT quantum simulation codes. The results of the structural analysis showed that SWBNNT is stable to both B and N dopants. It was also observed that the photodecomposition activity of the B-doped nanotube improved significantly under the condition of slight compressive stress, while it decreased for the N-doped nanotube. Therefore, N-doped SWBNNT showed poor performance under external pressure. Both B and N-doped systems could narrow the wide band gap of SWBNNT to the photocatalytic region below 3 eV, therefore this material can be used as photocatalysts in water splitting for hydrogen evolution, dye degradation, wastewater treatment, etc. Analysis of the optical properties revealed that B-doped SWBNNT absorbs more photons in the visible range than the N-doped SWBNNT and can therefore be considered as a more efficient photocatalyst. In addition, it was found that all doped nanotubes are anisotropic since the absorption in one direction of nanotube axes is worse than the other.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.