Zinc sulfide semiconductor nanoparticles were synthesized in an aqueous solution of polyvinyl pyrrolidone via a simple microwave irradiation method. The effect of the polymer concentration and the type of sulfur source on the particle size and dispersion of the final ZnS nanoparticle product was carefully examined. Microwave heating generally occurs by two main mechanisms: dipolar polarization of water and ionic conduction of precursors. The introduction of the polymer affects the heating rate by restriction of the rotational motion of dipole molecules and immobilization of ions. Consequently, our results show that the presence of the polymer strongly affects the nucleation and growth rates of the ZnS nanoparticles and therefore determines the average particle size and the dispersion. Moreover, we found that PVP adsorbed on the surface of the ZnS nanoparticles by interaction of the C-N and C=O with the nanoparticle's surface, thereby affording protection from agglomeration by steric hindrance. Generally, with increasing PVP concentration, mono-dispersed colloidal solutions were obtained and at the optimal PVP concentration (5%), sufficiently small size and narrow size distributions were obtained from both sodium sulfide and thioacetamide sulfur sources. Finally, the sulfur source directly influences the reaction mechanism and the final particle morphology, as well as the average size.
ZnS and CdS nanoparticles were prepared by a simple microwave irradiation method under mild conditions. The obtained nanoparticles were characterized by XRD, TEM and EDX. The results indicated that high purity of nanosized ZnS and CdS was successfully obtained with cubic and hexagonal crystalline structures, respectively. The band gap energies of ZnS and CdS nanoparticles were estimated using UV-visible absorption spectra to be about 4.22 and 2.64 eV, respectively. Photocatalytic degradation of methylene blue was carried out using physical mixtures of ZnS and CdS nanoparticles under a 500-W halogen lamp of visible light irradiation. The residual concentration of methylene blue solution was monitored using UV-visible absorption spectrometry. From the study of the variation in composition of ZnS:CdS, a composition of 1:4 (by weight) was found to be very efficient for degradation of methylene blue. In this case the degradation efficiency of the photocatalyst nanoparticles after 6 h irradiation time was about 73% with a reaction rate of 3.61 × 10-3 min-1. Higher degradation efficiency and reaction rate were achieved by increasing the amount of photocatalyst and initial pH of the solution.
The present work reports a detailed mechanistic interpretation of the role of the solubility of dopants and resultant midgap defect energies in band gap engineering. While there is a general perception that a single dopant is associated with single solubility and defect mechanisms, in reality, the potential for multiple solubility and defect mechanisms requires a more nuanced interpretation. Similarly, Kröger-Vink defect equilibria assume that stoichiometries during substitutional and interstitial solid solubility as well as Schottky and Frenkel pair formation are compensated by the diffusion of matrix ions to the grain boundaries or surface. However, this approach does not allow the possibility that stoichiometry is uncompensated, where diffusion of the matrix ion to lattice interstices occurs, followed by charge compensation by redox of this ion. Consequently, a modified defect equilibria formalism has been developed in order to allow description of this situation. Experimental data for the structural, chemical, semiconducting, and photocatalytic properties as a function of doping level are correlated with conceptual structural models, a comprehensive energy band diagram, and the corresponding defect equilibria. These correlations reveal the complex mechanisms of the interrelated solubility and defect formation mechanisms, which change significantly and irregularly as a function of small changes in doping level. The analyses confirm that the assumption of single mechanisms of solid solubility and defect formation may be simplifications of more complex processes. The generation of (1) a matrix of complementary characterisation and analytical data, (2) the calculation of a complete energy band diagram, (3) consideration of charge compensation mechanisms and redox beyond the limitations of Kröger-Vink approaches, and (4) the development of models of corresponding structural analogies combine to create a new approach to interpret and explain experimental data. These strategies allow deconstruction of these complex issues and thus targeting of optimal and possibly unique doping levels to achieve lattice configurations that may be energetically and structurally unfavorable. These approaches then can be applied to other doped semiconducting systems.