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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
791

[en] MICROFABRICATION OF POLYMERIC AND LIGNOCELLULOSIC REACTORS FOR PHOTOCATALYSIS AND CONTINUOUS FLOW CUAAC REACTION / [pt] MICROFABRICAÇÃO DE REATORES POLIMÉRICOS E LIGNOCELULÓSICOS PARA FOTOCATÁLISE E REAÇÃO DE CUAAC EM FLUXO CONTÍNUO

DRUVAL SANTOS DE SA 07 January 2021 (has links)
[pt] No presente trabalho foi investigada a microfabricação de reatores fotocatalíticos de polidimetilsiloxano (PDMS) para o estudo comparativo de aumento de escala entre micro- e mesorreatores, e lignocelulósicos de bambu para reação de cicloadição alcino-azida catalisada por cobre(I) (CuAAC) em fluxo contínuo. Nesse cenário, foi desenvolvida uma configuração experimental de scale-up e numbering-up de sistemas meso- e microfluídicos fotocatalíticos, respectivamente, para comparar a eficiência de fotodegradação de TiO2/P25 em rodamina B (RB) e azul de metileno (em inglês, Methylene Blue, MB) sob irradiação UV. Os resultados obtidos sugerem que o aumento do volume (scale-up) reduz os valores de D(por cento), enquanto que numbering-up mantém a eficiência fotocatalítica com redução significativa do tempo de reação. M6-60 (micro)L apresentou melhor desempenho entre os dispositivos, com degradação total do MB (1,2 x 10-5 mol L-1) em apenas 1h, e foto-oxidação total de fenol (1,2 x 10-4 mol L-1) em 4h. Além disto, M6-60 (micro)L apresentou menor consumo de energia elétrica por ordem (0,012 kWh m-3) e maior rendimento quântico (2,6 x 10-2) em comparação com os outros dispositivos. O desenvolvimento de suportes sólidos lignocelulósicos apresentou importantes características para os processos de funcionalização de TEMPO-TAL com íons Cu(II) e Zn(II) e CuNPs. Os suportes foram devidamente caracterizados por MEV/EDS e FT-IR. Os resultados para a reação de CuAAC mostraram rendimentos de 79-82 por cento com reciclabilidade de até 7 vezes e lixiviação média de cobre de 1,30 ppm, e foram importantes para o desenvolvimento do microrreator de bambu. A microfabricação do microrreator lignocelulósicos de bambu (L(micro)R) foi realizada a partir de etapas de cortes, sem utilização de técnicas caras e sala limpa. L(micro)R mostrou fácil prototipagem e rápida oxidação com N-oxil-2,2,6,6-tetrametilpiperidina (TEMPO) e funcionalização com íons cobre (Cu-L(micro)R) e nanopartículas de cobre (CuNPs-L(micro)R). O desempenho de CuAAC em fluxo contínuo do Cu-L(micro)R foi demonstrado através da realização de estudos de reciclabilidade e rendimentos em diferentes taxas de fluxo (0,1 a 0,8 mL min-1). Cu-L(micro)R apresentou rendimentos de 60 por cento a 96 por cento para 5 tipos de reações CuAAC, indicando promissora aplicação na área de catálise em dispositivos microfluídicos. Todas as reações foram realizadas em regime de fluxo com MeOH:H2O (2:1) e lixiviação de cobre inferior a 6,0 ppm, produzindo uma série de 5 derivados de 1,2,3-triazol 1,4-dissubstituídos com boa eficiência em um ambiente com poucos recursos. CuNPs-L(micro)R apresentou limitação para realização de CuAAC por não alcançar as condições ideais de aquecimento, exigidas para ocorrência da reação. / [en] The present work had two main objectives. The first refers to the development of polydimethylsiloxane photocatalytic microreactors (PDMS) for the comparative scale-up study between micro- and mesoreactors. The second focused on the development of bamboo lignocellulosic microreactors for copper(I) catalyzed alkine-azide cycloaddition reaction (CuAAC). In this scenario, an experimental scale-up and numbering-up configuration of photocatalytic meso- and microfluidic systems were developed, to compare, respectively, the photodegradation efficiency of TiO2-P25 in rhodamine B (RB) and methylene blue (MB) under UV irradiation. The obtained results suggest that the scale-up reduces the values of D (percent), while numbering-up maintains the photocatalytic efficiency with a significant reaction time reduction. The best photocatalytic microfluidic system was M6-60 (micro)L, which presented total MB degradation (1.2 x 10-5 mol L-1) in only 1h, and total phenol photo-oxidation (1,2 x 10-4 mol L-1) in 4h. Furthermore, M6-60 (micro)LM6 had lower electrical energy consumption (0,012 kWh m-3) and higher quantum yield (2,6 x 10-2) compared to others. The development of solid lignocellulosic supports showed important characteristics for the TEMPO-TAL functionalization processes with Cu(II), Zn(II) ions and CuNPs. The supports were properly characterized by SEM/ EDS and FT-IR. The results for the CuAAC reaction showed yields of 79-82 percent with recyclability of up to 7 times and average copper leaching of 1.30 ppm, and were important for the development of the bamboo microreactor. The microfabrication of the bamboo lignocellulosic microreactor (L(micro)R) was performed from cutting steps, without using expensive techniques and clean room. L(micro)R showed easy prototyping and rapid oxidation with N-oxyl-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine (TEMPO) and functionalization with copper ions (Cu-L(micro)R) and copper nanoparticles (CuNPs-L(micro)R). Cu-L(micro)R continuous flow CuAAC performance was demonstrated by conducting recyclability and yield studies at different flow rates (0.1 to 0.8 mL-1). Cu-L(micro)R presented 60 percent to 96 percent yields for 5 types of CuAAC reactions, indicating promising application in the area of catalysis in microfluidic devices. All reactions were performed under a MeOH:H2O (2:1) flow regime and copper leaching below 6.0 ppm, producing a series of 5 efficiently 1,4-disubstituted 1,2,3-triazols derivatives in a resource-poor environment. CuNPs-L(micro)R presented limitation for CuAAC because it did not reach the ideal heating conditions required for the reaction to occur.
792

Labile Ligand Variation in Polyazine-Bridged Ruthenium/Rhodium Supramolecular Complexes Providing New Insight into Solar Hydrogen Production from Water

Rogers, Hannah Mallalieu 15 December 2015 (has links)
Mixed-metal supramolecular complexes containing one or two RuII light absorbing subunits coupled through polyazine bridging ligands to a RhIII reactive metal center were prepared for use as photocatalysts for the production of solar H2 fuel from H2O. The electrochemical, photophysical, and photochemical properties upon variation of the monodentate, labile ligands coordinated to the Rh reactive metal center were investigated. Bimetallic complexes [(Ph2phen)2Ru(dpp)RhX2(Ph2phen)]3+ (Ph2phen = 4,10-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline; dpp = 2,3-bis(2-pyridyl)pyrazine; X = Br- or Cl-) were prepared using a building block approach, allowing for selective component choice. The identity of the halide coordinated to Rh did not impact the light absorbing or excited state properties of the structural motif. However, the o-donating ability of the halides modulated the Rh-based cathodic electrochemistry and required the use of multiple pathways to explain the reduction of Rh by two electrons. Regardless of halide identity, the bimetallic complex possessed a Ru-based HOMO (highest occupied molecular orbital) and Rh-based LUMO (lowest unoccupied molecular orbital) important for photoinitiated electron collection at Rh. As a photocatalyst for H2 evolution, the X = Br- complex produced nearly 30% more H2 than the X = Cl- analogue. H2 production experiments with added halide suggested that ion pairing with halides played a major role in catalyst deactivation, which provided evidence for the importance of component selection for photocatalyst design. New trimetallic complex [{(bpy)2Ru(dpp)}2Ru(OH)2](PF6)5 (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine) was prepared for comparison to halide analogues [{(bpy)2Ru(dpp)}2RhX2](PF6)5 (X = Br- or Cl-). The synthesis of a halide-free supramolecule containing OH- ligands afforded an ideal system to further examine the impact of the ligands at the reactive metal center on H2 photocatalysis. Electrochemistry results revealed that while the identity of the ligands at Rh did modulate the Rh-based reduction potential, all three complexes possessed a Ru-based HOMO and Rh-based LUMO. The light absorbing properties were not impacted by the identity of the monodentate ligands at Rh; however, the excited state properties did vary upon changing the ligands at Rh. The hydroxo trimetallic complex functioned as a photocatalyst for H2 production in organic solvent, producing nearly double the amount of H2 as the highest performing Br-' trimetallic complex in DMF solvent. Interestingly, H2 production studies in high dielectric aqueous solvent revealed no discrepancies in H2 evolution upon variation of the ligands at Rh, which further supported the ion pairing phenomenon realized for the bimetallic motif. Variation of the labile ligands coordinated to the Rh reactive metal center in RuIIRhIII multimetallic supramolecules provided important insight about the large impact of small structural variation on H2 photocatalysis. Electrochemical, photophysical, and photochemical studies of new RuIIRhIII complexes afforded a deeper understanding of the molecular processes important for the design of new complexes applicable to solar fuel production schemes. / Ph. D.
793

Ru,Rh,Ru Supramolecular Photocatalysts within Nafion® Membranes: Ion-exchange, Photoelectrolysis and Electron Transfer Processes

Naughton, Elise Michele 27 April 2016 (has links)
Perfluorosulfonate ionomers, such as Nafion® have been shown to demonstrate a profound affinity for large cationic complexes, and the study of polymer-bound cations may provide insight regarding Nafion® morphology by contrasting molecular size with existing models. The trimetallic complex, [{(bpy)2Ru(dpp)}2RhBr2] 5+, is readily absorbed by ion exchange into Na+ -form Nafion® membranes under ambient conditions. The dimensions of three different isomers of the trimetallic complex are estimated to be: 23.6 Å × 13.3 Å × 10.8 Å, 18.9 Å × 18.0 Å × 13.7 Å, and 23.1 Å × 12.0 Å × 11.4 Å, yielding an average molecular volume of 1.2×103 Å3 . At equilibrium, the partition coefficient for the ion-exchange of the trimetallic complex into Nafion® from a DMF solution is 5.7 × 103 . Furthermore, the total cationic charge of the exchanged trimetallic complexes counterbalances 86 ± 2% of the anionic SO3 − sites in Nafion®. The characteristic dimensions of morphological models for the ionic domains in Nafion® are comparable to the molecular dimensions of the large mixedmetal complexes. Surprisingly, SAXS analysis indicates that the complexes absorb into the ionic domains of Nafion® without significantly changing the ionomer morphology. Given the profound affinity for absorption of these large cationic molecules, a more open-channel model for the morphology of perfluorosulfonate ionomers is more reasonable, in agreement with recent experimental findings. In contrast to smaller monometallic complexes, the time- v dependent uptake of the large trimetallic cations is biexponential. This behavior is attributed to a fast initial ion-exchange process on the surface of the membrane, accompanied by a slower, transport-limited ion-exchange for sites in the interior of the ionomer matrix. The development of Nafion®/[{(bpy)2Ru(dpp)}2RhBr2] 5+ modified electrodes is also described for both FTO electrodes and materials made from electrospun carbon mats. The [{(bpy)2Ru(dpp)}2RhBr2] 5+ complexes behave as photocatalytic hydrogen production catalysts in the Nafion® membrane. Furthermore, a second bulk photoelectrolysis experiment with the Nafion®/[{(bpy)2Ru(dpp)}2RhBr2] 5+/FTO electrodes shows an enhancement of catalytic activity compared to the first photoelectrolysis experiment. This enhancement is attributed to halide loss following the first reduction process. Lastly, electrospun carbon nanofiber mats behave as electron donor materials for [{(bpy)2Ru(dpp)}2RhBr2] 5+/Nafion® membranes. / Ph. D.
794

New Polyazine-Bridged Ru(II),Rh(III) and Ru(II),Rh(I) Supramolecular Photocatalysts for Water Reduction to Hydrogen Applicable for Solar Energy Conversion and Mechanistic Investigation of the Photocatalytic Cycle

Zhou, Rongwei 09 November 2014 (has links)
The goal of this research is to test the design constraints of active dpp-bridged RuII,RhIII (dpp = 2,3-bis(2-pyridyl)pyrazine)) supramolecular photocatalysts for water reduction to H2 and provide mechanistic insights into the catalytic cycle. Two member of a new RuII,RhIII motifs with only one Rh-'Cl bond, [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)RhCl(tpy)](PF6)4 ( bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine, tpy = 2,2':6,2"-terpyridine) and [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)RhCl(tpm)](PF6)4, (tpm = tris(1-pyrazolyl)methane), and a cis-RhCl2 model system, [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)RhCl2(bpy)](PF6)3, were prepared. This new motif was to test whether two Rh-'Cl bonds on RhIII are required for the photocatalytic water reduction. 1H NMR spectroscopic analysis of complexes prepared using deuterated ligands was used to characterize these three RuII,RhIII supramolecular complexes. Electrochemical studies suggested that replacing bpy with a tridentate ligand on RhIII shifts the RhIII/II and RhII/I reduction couples positively, which can modulate the orbital energetics of the RhIII LUMO (lowest-unoccupied molecular orbital). This substitute also changes the rate of ligand dissociation following the reduction of RhIII. In tpm and bpy systems, RhII intermediate is more stable than that in the tpy system. All three complexes were good light absorbers in the visible region and weak emitters from their emissive Ru(dπ)-'dpp(π*) 3MLCT (metal-to-ligand charge transfer) excited states at room temperature. The population of a low-lying 3MMCT (metal-to-metal charge transfer) ES (excited state) from the 3MLCT ES contributed to the weak emission, indicating an important intramolecular electron transfer process from dpp' to RhIII upon photoexcitation. The lower-lying 3MMCT excited state in the tpm and tpy systems relative to the bpy system result in a higher rate constant (ket = 2.6 x 10^7 vs 1.7 x 10^7 s-1) for intramolecular electron transfer. Spectrophotochemical analysis suggested that all three complexes were photoinitiated electron collectors capable of collecting two electrons on the RhIII center to generate the RuII,RhI species in the presence of DMA (N,N-dimethylaniline). The observed H2 production from water using [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)RhCl(tpm)](PF6)4 and [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)RhCl(tpy)](PF6)4 established that two halides on RhIII are not necessary in the dpp-bridge RuII,RhIII supramolecular photocatalytic-water-reduction system. This new discovery opens a new approach to the design of different RuII,RhIII motifs for photocatalysis. The active species for water reduction is proposed to be [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)RhICl(TL)]3+ from [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)RhCl(TL)](PF6)4 (TL (terminal ligand) = tpy or tpm) and [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)Rh(bpy)]3+ from [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)RhCl2(bpy)](PF6)3 respectively. Included here is the design and study of a RuII,RhI complex, [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)RhCl(COD)](PF6)3 (COD =1,5-cyclooctadiene) to provide more insights into the photophysical and photochemical properties of polypyridyl RuII,RhI species. Electrochemical and photophysical studies revealed a dpp-based LUMO in this RuII,RhI complex, suggesting dpp reduction upon photoexcitation. Photochemical study found that [(bpy)2Ru(dpp)RhCl(COD)](PF6)3 is an active photocatalyst for water reduction and that additional reduction(s) is (are) required after the generation of the RuII,RhI active species in the RuII,RhIII supramolecular photocatalytic H2 production system. This hypothesis was supported by the electrocatalytic behaviors of the RuII,RhIII supramolecular complexes for proton reduction. Cyclic voltammetry results in the presence of an acid suggested that the protonolysis of the RuII,RhIIH and RuII,RhIH species are electrocatalytic H2-evolution pathways. The mechanism is acid-dependent and influenced by terminal ligand. The studies of electrocatalytic proton reduction on these RuII,RhIII complexes suggested several possible intermediates involved in the photocatalytic water reduction cycle. The insights gained from this research can provide guidance in designing new type of RuII,RhIII and RuII,RhI complexes with better photocatalytic and/or electrocatalytic H2 production performance. / Ph. D.
795

Photocatalysis studies using mesoporous modified V-MCM-48 Stober synthesis: acetaldehyde, carbon monoxide, ethanol, acetone, 2-propanol, & acetonitrile

Mahoney, Luther James January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Chemistry / Kenneth J. Klabunde / Although Degussia-Huls P-25 TiO[subscript]2 semiconductor photocatalyst has high photodegradation rate for organic molecules, it works only under ultra-violet (UV) light. Mesoporous metal doped V-MCM-48 silica was synthesized under ambient conditions for use as a visible-light photocatalyst to convert toxic probe molecules to innocuous products: CO[subscript]2 + H[subscript]2O. The synthesis employed a modified Stober metal doped MCM-48 silica method. Powder X-ray diffraction (XRD), diffuse-reflectance-ultra-violet-visible (DR-UV-vis) spectroscopy, and N[subscript]2 adsorption-desorpton analysis characterization methods were completed on V-MCM-48 mesoporous material. These characterization methods indicate V-MCM-48 structure had formed with visible light absorption and mesoporous properties. Photocatalysis studies were completed with V-MCM-48 under dark, visible, and UV-light illumination conditions for the following probe molecules: acetaldehyde, carbon monoxide, ethanol, acetone, 2-propanol, and acetonitrile. Acetaldehyde over V-MCM-48 was converted to CO[subscript]2 under dark, visible, and UV-light conditions. Carbon monoxide photooxidation occurred over V-MCM-48 under visible and UV-light. Ethanol and acetonitrile had smaller photodegradation activity over V-MCM-48. Acetone and 2-propanol had no activity photocatalytically. Under dark and visible light illumination, V-MCM-48 consumed approximately one-half acetaldehyde and produced one-third CO[subscript]2 concentration as compared with the P-25 TiO[subscript]2 under UV-light. V-MCM-48 produced two-thirds of the amount of CO[subscript]2 in comparison to nanoparticle Au/ZnO catalyst under UV-light. The results infer V-MCM-48 might be useful in gas and liquid phase photocatalysis including water-splitting due to a high oxidation state (V[superscript]5+), visible light absorption, and high surface area. In conclusion, an extended literature review has been completed and literature employed extensively throughout the thesis with potential methods to further the research on V-MCM-48/Si-MCM-48 in catalysis, chromatography, adsorption/gas separation, and solar collection/water-splitting.
796

Polyoxométallates hybrides : vers des systèmes covalents photoactifs dans le visible

Santoni, Marie-Pierre 04 1900 (has links)
Réalisé en cotutelle, sous la direction du Pr. Bernold Hasenknopf, à l'Institut Parisien de Chimie Moléculaire, Université Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris VI, France) et dans le cadre de l'Ecole Doctorale "Physique et Chimie des Matériaux" - Spécialité Chimie Inorganique (ED397). / Notre projet se situe dans le contexte actuel de recherche d’énergies « propres », qui permettraient d’assurer un développement durable. Nous nous sommes intéressés à l’édification de systèmes moléculaires bio-inspirés, capables de : (i) collecter efficacement l’énergie solaire, grâce au design d’assemblages supramoléculaires multi-nucléaires photoactifs ; (ii) transférer efficacement l’énergie accumulée jusqu’au catalyseur, lequel effectue les processus multiélectroniques nécessaires à la génération des combustibles. Notre choix s’est porté sur les systèmes hybrides covalents inorganiques-organiques, à base de polyoxométallates (POMs) photoactivés, dans le visible, par des complexes de métaux de transition. Dans un premier temps, nous avons étudié des chromophores dinucléaires de Ru(II) comprenant le motif électroattracteur 1,3,5-triazine, en raison de leurs capacités de transfert d’énergie et pour la prolongation du temps de vie de l’état excité du chromophore. Dans un deuxième temps, la nécessité d’établir une connexion covalente entre le complexe métallique et le POM nous a amené à faire le design de ligands polydentates ditopiques de type trialkoxo. Cette méthodologie, flexible sur le plan synthétique, nous a donné accès à une famille de POMs présentant des sites de coordination de denticité variable (de monodentate à tridentate), en vue d’accommoder divers cations métalliques. Nous avons ensuite étudié la complexation de divers métaux de transition sur ces nouveaux POMs. Les systèmes visés étaient soit des systèmes à transfert de charges photoinduits (complexation de Ru, de Re), soit des systèmes photocatalytiques (complexation de Re et Co) et/ou électrocatalytiques (complexation de Co). L’auto-assemblage des POMs, guidé par le mode de coordination du métal (tel Pd(II) ou Re(I)) et la géométrie de la brique constituante POM, a été également étudié, car il constitue un outil puissant dans l’assemblage de systèmes supramoléculaires multi-nucléaires photoactifs. Les systèmes visés sont destinés à servir de systèmes modèles dans l’édification de systèmes moléculaires à composants multiples et de matériaux hybrides multi-fonctionnels. / We are interested in the photocatalytic production of clean energy sources, such as H2, in order to ensure global sustainable development. We focused our attention on molecular bio-inspired systems, capable of : (i) efficient light harvesting, based on the careful design of multi-nuclear supramolecular photoactive units; (ii) efficient energy transfer to the catalyst, chosen for its ability to perform multi-electronic processes needed in fuels production. We chose inorganic-organic covalent hybrids, constituted of visible-photoactivated POMs by transition metal complexes. First, we designed and studied Ru(II) dinuclear complexes, based on the electrodeficient motif 1,3,5-triazine, for their energy transfer properties and extended excited-state lifetimes. Then, the covalent connection, to ensure between sub-units, compelled us to design new ditopic polydentate ligands. This flexible synthetic methodology gave access to a family of POMs presenting various types of coordination sites (from monodentate to tridentate), in order to allow complexation of different metals. Complexation studies on the new POMs were conducted and aimed at : (i) photoinduced charge transfer systems (complexation of Ru, and Re) ; (ii) photocatalytic (complexation of Re and Co) and/or electrocatalytic systems (complexation of Co). Metal-directed self-assembling of POMs (guided by Pd(II) or Re(I)) and the coordination geometry of the POMs building-block, has also been studied, as a tool in the building-up of electro- and photoactive supramolecular systems. The model systems studied will be used to design molecular multi-functional hybrid materials.
797

Performance study of photocatalytic oxidation for the abatement of volatile organic compounds from indoor air environments / Étude de l’efficacité de l’élimination par photocatalyse des composés organiques volatils présents dans l’air intérieur

Vildozo, Daniel 02 July 2010 (has links)
Ces derniers temps, des procédés commerciaux basés sur la technologie photocatalytique, sont arrivés sur le marché, afin de satisfaire la demande croissante du traitement de l’air intérieur. L’objectif de ce présent travail est de développer une nouvelle méthodologie pour évaluer l’efficacité de ce nouveau procédé. Pour l’étude de l’application de la photocatalyse au traitement de l’air intérieur, un dispositif expérimental a été mis au point et deux méthodes analytiques ont été développées (ATD-GCMS et GC-PDHID). La performance de la dégradation photocatalytique du 2-propanol et du toluène à faibles concentrations (ppbv) a été étudiée. L’influence des différents paramètres (humidité relative, débit, concentration initiale, etc.) et leurs interactions sur la conversion, la formation des intermédiaires et la minéralisation au CO2 a été établie / Many commercial systems based in the photocatalytic technology have reached the market recently in order to address the growing demand for improve poor indoor air qualities. The present work deals with the development of a new methodology in order to evaluate the efficiency of this process. For the study of photocatalytic oxidation for indoor air applications, an experimental set-up was designed and two analytical tools (ATD-GC-MS and GC-PDHID) were developed. The performance of the photocatalytic treatment of 2-propanol and toluene at indoor air concentrations levels (ppbv) were realised. The influence of several parameters and their interactions effects on the conversion, by-product formation and mineralization to CO2 were established
798

Photocatalytic Mineralization of Phenol on Fluidized Titanium Oxide-Coated Silica Gel

Rincon, Guillermo J 15 May 2015 (has links)
A bench-scale tubular reactor with recirculation was built in order to study the efficiency of the photocatalytic oxidation of phenol on fluidized titanium oxide-coated silica gel beads. A UV-C lamp placed along the central vertical axes of the reactor was used as source of photons. A bed of silica gel beads was fluidized by means of fluid recirculation and forced to follow upward helical flow around the lamp. Anatase was successfully synthetized on silica gel particles of average diameters 224, 357 and 461 µm, as confirmed by scanning electron micrographs, through a sol-gel technique using a titanium (iv)isopropoxide / hydrochloric acid / ethanol precursor. Data was obtained from multiple 8-hours photocatalytic experiments using a determined mass of beads fluidized in an aqueous solution of known initial phenol concentration. Contaminant degradation with irradiation time was measured as COD. Beads that had been subjected to three consecutive coating procedures produced an 8-h removal efficiency 10% higher than beads with a single coat. 20 g L-1 of silica beads was found to be the optimum load for the experimental reactor configuration regardless of beads size, although efficiency increased with decreasing size of the latter. Experimental results confirmed that the efficiency of phenol photocatalytic degradation decreases with increasing pollutant concentration. Also, the highest removal was achieved with initial pH 3, and it decreased with increasing pH. When NaCl was added to the solution, COD removal increased with increasing salinity. Additionally, it was found that dissolved oxygen is indispensable for photocatalysis to proceed, and that saturation of the treated mixture with oxygen was effectively achieved by keeping the liquid surface in contact with pure oxygen at 1 atm. Finally, statistical analysis of the data showed that photocatalytic mineralization of phenol-derived COD under the experimental conditions follows exponential decay. Based on this finding, a correlation model was proposed for the accurate prediction (minimum R2 = 0.9840) of the COD removal efficiency of the reactor for any given initial COD.
799

Photocatalytic degradation of dyes and pesticides in the presence of ions

Pete, Kwena Yvonne 03 1900 (has links)
M. Tech. (Department of Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Technology), Vaal University of Technology / Water pollution caused by organic and inorganic contaminants represents an important ecological and health hazard. Simultaneous treatment of organic and inorganic contaminants had gradually gained great scientific interest. Advanced oxidation processes such as photocatalysis, using TiO2 as a photocatalyst, have been shown to be very robust in the removal of biorecalcitrant pollutants. These methods offer the advantage of removing the pollutants, in contrast to conventional techniques. At present, the main technical challenge that hinder its commercialization remained on the post-recovery of the photocatalyst particles after water treatment. Supporting of the photocatalyst on the adsorbent surface is important as it assists during the filtration step, reducing losses of the materials and yielding better results in degrading pollutants. To overcome this challenge, in this study composite photocatalysts of TiO2/zeolite and TiO2/silica were prepared and investigated to explore the possible application in the simultaneous removal of organic and inorganic compounds from contaminated water. The main objective of this study was to investigate the heterogeneous photocatalytic degradation of organic compounds in the presence of metal ions using composite photocatalysts. The Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET), Scanning Electron Microscopy and Energy Dispersive X-ray (SEM-EDX), Raman spectroscopy (RS) and zeta potential (ZP) analyses were used to characterize the prepared composite photocatalysts. The successive composite photocatalysts were used in a semi-batch reactor under an irradiation intensity of 5.5 mW/m2 (protected by a quartz sleeve) at 25 ± 3°C for the photocatalytic degradation of synthetic textile (methyl orange) and agricultural (atrazine) wastewater in the presence of ions. The effect of operating parameters such as TiO2 composition on supporting material, particle size, composite photocatalyst loading, initial pollutant concentration and pH were optimized. The effects of inorganic salts and humic acid on dye and pesticides degradation were also studied, respectively. The performance of the photocatalyst reactor was evaluated on the basis of color removal, metal ion reduction, total organic carbon (TOC) reduction, intermediates product analysis and modeling of kinetics and isotherms. Different kinetic and isotherm models were introduced and applied in this work. Important aspects such as error functions with the optimal magnitude were used for the selection of the best suitable model. / European Union. City of Mikkeli, Finland. Water Research Commission (RSA)
800

Impact du traitement photocatalytique sur les cellules eucaryotes fongiques : vers la compréhension des mécanismes d'action / Photocatalysis on eukaryotic fungal cells : toward the comprehension of killing mechanisms

Thabet, Sana 25 November 2013 (has links)
La photocatalyse est un procédé d'oxydation avancée qui consiste en l'activation du dioxyde de titane sous UV pour générer des espèces oxydantes. Ces dernières sont capables d'inactiver les cellules vivantes. Nos travaux ont porté sur l'analyse des mécanismes antimicrobiens de la photocatalyse à l'échelle cellulaire et moléculaire sur le modèle eucaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae, champignon unicellulaire. Le traitement photocatalytique affecte de manière drastique la cultivabilité de cette levure. La diminution de la cultivabilité a été reliée à la perte de l'intégrité membranaire et à la perte de l'activité enzymatique intracellulaire, analysées par cytométrie en flux. L'exposition des levures à la photocatalyse provoque des dommages à toutes les macromolécules (acides nucléiques, lipides membranaires, protéines) et par conséquent aux structures cellulaires ce qui engendre la libération de constituants cellulaires (ions, acides aminés), de même que la formation de produits de dégradation (malondialdéhyde, acides organiques). Ces dommages peuvent être liés à un stress oxydant intracellulaire suggéré par l'accumulation des ions superoxyde dans les cellules traitées et l'augmentation de la résistance pour les souches surexprimant des enzymes de dégradation des ROS. Enfin, l'étude de l'impact de la photocatalyse sur des organismes fongiques ayant un impact environnemental ou sur la santé, a révélé l'existence de cellules ou de structures fongiques résistantes. Ces résultats ont apporté des éléments de connaissance inédits sur l'impact de la photocatalyse sur les cellules eucaryotes fongiques et ouvrent de nouvelles perspectives notamment dans la compréhension du phénomène de résistance / Photocatalysis is an advanced oxidative process that generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) and inactivates living cells. The aim of this work was to have a better understanding of the antimicrobial mechanisms generated by photocatalytic treatment. The cellular impact was monitored using the unicellular fungal model, Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast. Photocatalysis reduces drastically the cultivability of yeast cells. Flow cytometry analyses revealed that the decrease of cell cultivability was related to both damages in plasma membrane and loss of intracellular enzymatic activity. During exposure to photocatalysis, multiple cellular macromolecules are damaged (lipids, proteins, nucleic acids). These damages are responsible for cellular structure dysfunction leading to a release of intracellular compounds (ions, amino acids) and the formation of by-products and pollutant (carboxylic acids, malondialdéhyde). The increase of intracellular superoxide ions amounts and the higher resistance of yeast strains overexpressing ROS detoxifying enzymes suggested an intracellular oxidative status responsible for described macromolecular damages. Finally, exploring photocatalytic treatment on other environmental and health impact fungi revealed the presence of resistant cells or structures. For the first time, an interdisciplinary work focusing on cellular impacts of photocatalysis was monitored leading to a better understanding and to new perspectives

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