Degradation of trinitrophenol by sequential catalytic wet air oxidation and solar TiO2 photocatalysis
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Katsoni, A; Gomes, H.T.; Pastrana Martínez, L.M.; Faria, J.L.; Figueiredo, J.L.; Mantzavinos, D.; Silva, A.M.T.Editorial
Elsevier
Date
2011-08-15Referencia bibliográfica
Chemical Engineering Journal, Volume 172, Issues 2–3, 2011, Pages 634-640
Sponsorship
LSRE/LCM LA is supported by “Programa de Financiamento Plurianual de Unidades de I&D/Laboratórios Associados” by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT). AMTS acknowledges the financial support from POCI/N010/2006. AK thanks the Research Committee of TUC for subsidising her visit to University of Porto. The financial support from the European Commission (Clean Water – GA n° 227017, Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013)) is gratefully acknowledged. Clean Water is a Collaborative Project co-funded by the Research DG of the European Commission within the joint RTD activities of the Environment and NMP Thematic Priorities. The work was also partially funded by projects PTDC/AAC-AMB/110088/2009 and NANO/NTec-CA/0046/2007, approved by FCT and co-supported by FEDER.Abstract
Catalytic wet air oxidation (CWAO) and solar TiO2 photocatalysis were investigated as advanced oxidation processes to degrade trinitrophenol (TNP) in model aqueous solutions. An activated carbon (AC) treated with sulphuric acid of different concentrations (5, 10 and 18 M) at two different temperatures (353 and 423 K) was investigated as a metal-free CWAO catalyst, while a commercially available P25 TiO2 powder was used as a photocatalyst. CWAO experiments were conducted at 448 K, 0.7 MPa oxygen pressure (4.7 MPa of total pressure), 1.3 g L−1 AC loading and 270 mg L−1 TNP concentration, while photocatalytic experiments were conducted at ambient temperature, 1 g L−1 photocatalyst loading, 500–1000 W m−2 irradiance provided by a solar simulator and 32–270 mg L−1 TNP concentration. Treatment efficiency was assessed by measuring the concentrations of TNP and nitrates, total organic carbon (TOC) and biochemical oxygen demand (BOD5). Up to 90% TNP degradation was attained during CWAO over 120 min, from an initial concentration of 270 mg L−1. For the same TNP concentration, TiO2 photocatalysis gives only 13% conversion over the same 120 min. However, for TNP concentrations below 144 mg L−1, photocatalysis can be effectively used: 100 and 80% TNP degradation obtained in 120 min of irradiation for initial TNP concentrations of 64 and 144 mg L−1, respectively. In this respect, CWAO and photocatalysis were employed sequentially to treat TNP; complete TNP conversion being achieved after 120 min of CWAO followed by 60 min of photocatalysis at 1000 W m−2 irradiance, and this was accompanied by 82% TOC reduction, as well as an increase of BOD5/TOC ratio from 0 to 2.28.