Anodic TiO 2 nanotube layer directly formed on the inner surface of Ti pipe for a tubular photocatalytic reactor
- Authors
- 김형일; 김두헌; 김우열; 하윤철; 심성주; 김수정; 최원용
- Issue Date
- Jul-2016
- Publisher
- Elsevier BV
- Keywords
- TiO2 nanotube; Photocatalytic oxidation; Photocatalytic water treatment; Organic pollutant degradation; Continuous photocatalytic reactor
- Citation
- Applied Catalysis A: General, v.521, pp 174 - 181
- Pages
- 8
- Journal Title
- Applied Catalysis A: General
- Volume
- 521
- Start Page
- 174
- End Page
- 181
- URI
- https://scholarworks.sookmyung.ac.kr/handle/2020.sw.sookmyung/9712
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.apcata.2015.10.039
- ISSN
- 0926-860X
1873-3875
- Abstract
- We demonstrated the successful water treatment performance of a continuous-flow tubular TiO2 nanotube reactor made of Ti pipe where a TiO2 nanotube (TNT) layer was directly formed on the inner wall by an electrochemical anodization process. A cylindrical UV lamp was inserted into the pipe to irradiate the inner TNT surface as a light source. To optimize the thickness of TNT layer on Ti pipe, TNT layers with 1, 5 and 10 μm thickness were prepared and their photocatalytic activities were tested for the degradation of various organic substrates (acid orange 7 (AO7), dichloroacetate (DCA), and 4-chlorophenol (4-CP)) under UV illumination. The TNT layer with 10 μm thickness showed the highest photocatalytic activity, with first-order removal rate constants (k:min−1) of 0.019, 0.039, and 0.025 for AO7, 4-CP, and DCA, respectively. The directly formed TNTs (10 μm thickness) on Ti pipes in the continuous-flow tubular TNT reactor, having a strong adhesiveness and a high surface area, enabled the successful degradation of organic compounds and to have kept the activity without decrease during the repeated cycles and long-term experiments. The photocatalytic performance of the tubular TNT reactor was tested with a higher concentration, smaller volume ([4-CP]0 = 100 μM, solution vol. = 15 mL) and a lower concentration, larger volume ([4-CP]0 = 20 μM, solution vol. = 100 mL) in the circulation-flow mode (20 mL min−1). A good performance was achieved under the low intensity UV illumination (≈2 mW cm−2) with a half-life of ca. 50 min and ca. 11 h with 80% and 79% removal of TOC for the above two test conditions, respectively. The proposed tubular TNT reactor can be an effective option in the design of continuous flow-type photocatalytic reactors for practical water purification.
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