Abstract
Efficient removal of dye pollutants from wastewater remains a critical environmental challenge. In this work, we introduce the rational design of L-lysine derived carbon dots (LCQDs) integrated with TiO₂ to develop visible-light-responsive LCQDs@TiO₂ nanocomposites (NCs). Five composite materials with systematically varied LCQD loadings were synthesized and comprehensively characterized to elucidate structural, optical, and interfacial properties governing photocatalytic behavior. Incorporation of LCQDs effectively narrowed the TiO2 bandgap (3.0 eV) and significantly enhanced charge separation, resulting in markedly improved photocatalytic degradation efficiencies of methylene blue (94.6%) and rhodamine B (99.5%) under visible light irradiation. The optimized nanocomposites exhibited substantially higher rate constants than bare TiO2, following pseudo-first-order kinetics and demonstrated good stability over at least two consecutive photocatalytic cycles. In vitro cytocompatibility studies in HaCaT keratinocytes revealed acceptable cell viability and minimal perturbation to cell-cycle distribution at relevant exposure concentrations (50 μg/mL), suggesting limited acute biological stress. Overall, this work highlights LCQDs@TiO2 as an efficient and biologically tolerant photocatalyst platform, offering a promising strategy for sustainable dye remediation under visible-light irradiation.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 100620 |
| Journal | Carbon Trends |
| Volume | 23 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jan 2026 |
| Externally published | Yes |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 6 Clean Water and Sanitation
Keywords
- Carbon dots
- Cytotoxicity
- Dye-degradation
- L-Lysine
- Methylene blue
- ROS
- Rhodanine
- TiO nanocomposites
- Visible-light photocatalysis
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