Abstract
Several recently synthesized composites of nitrogen-doped TiO2 supported on activated carbon (N-TiO2/AC) were investigated for adsorption of recalcitrant organics and photocatalysis under the simulated solar light. Synergistic adsorption-photocatalysis was observed due to high adsorptive properties of the AC (see Figure 1). The synthesis could be tailored to produce a range of N-TiO2/AC with different loadings of N-TiO2 on AC, which demonstrated varying bifunctionalities of adsorption and photocatalysis. Bisphenol-A (BPA), acid red, and atrazine have been investigated. Adsorption of the pollutants (in dark) by N-TiO2/AC achieved equilibrium within 1 h. The adsorption capacity as determined by Langmuir equation was only marginally reduced due to partial blockage of AC surface by the deposited N-TiO2, as compared to the virgin AC. The results of BPA adsorption and photocatalysis are shown in Figure 2. Up to 95% of BPA in the bulk solution could be degraded by N-TiO2/AC within 8 h of irradiation. The BPA photocatalysis was more favorable under acidic condition. The bifunctionality of N-TiO2/AC permits self-regeneration of the exhausted AC under solar irradiation, and thus continual use in the flow-through system operating under repeating day-night cycle of alternating solar photocatalysis and adsorption processes, for effective removal of most organics.
Original language | English |
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Journal | ACS National Meeting Book of Abstracts |
Publication status | Published - 2010 |
Externally published | Yes |
Event | 240th ACS National Meeting and Exposition - Boston, MA, United States Duration: Aug 22 2010 → Aug 26 2010 |
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- General Chemistry
- General Chemical Engineering