ABSTRACT
Cement and clay beads coated with TiO2were used for the photo-degradation and mineralization of 2-chloro-4-nitrophenol (2Cl4NP) along with a heterogeneous solar photo-Fenton process using foundry sand (FS) as the iron source. The degradation process was optimized using slurry photocatalysis where 96% degradation of 2Cl4NP was achieved in 120 min at optimized conditions of C0=50 mgL-1, pH=4, 0.75 gL-1 TiO2 and H2O2= 0.1 mL/200 mL. Degradation of 2Cl4NP was analyzed through HPLC along with UV-Visible spectrophotometer at 266 nm. The degradation of 68% and 52% of 2Cl4NP was attained in fixed-bed photocatalysis using cement and clay beads, respectively. The durability studies of cement and clay beads were carried out in terms of number of recycles. 97.19% degradation was obtained in a solar photo-Fenton process after 105 min at pH=3. Complete mineralization of 2Cl4NP was confirmed through reduction in COD along with the disappearance of the parent compound peak in HPLC chromatograms.
Keywords:
Photocatalysis; Photo-Fenton process; Degradation; Cement beads; Clay beads
INTRODUCTION
2-Chloro-4-nitrophenol (2Cl4NP) is one of the toxic and complex compounds commonly used as an intermediate in both the pesticide and pharmaceutical industries. Ingestion, absorption through the skin and inhalation of 2Cl4NP is harmful as it causes irritation to the skin, gastrointestinal tract, eyes and respiratory tract. The adverse effects of these types of compounds on human health and environment due to their alarming concentrations in water bodies have been reported (Konstantinou et al., 2001Konstantinou, I. K., Sakellarides, T. M., Sakkas, V. A., and Albanis, T. A., Photocatalytic Degradation of Selected s-Triazine Herbicides and Organophosphorus Insecticides over Aqueous TiO2 Suspensions, Environmental Science and Technology , 35, No. 2, 398 (2001).). The excessive use of pesticides, fertilizers, pharmaceutical wastes and even small amount of industrial effluents are mainly responsible for the pollution of surface and groundwater (Chiron et al., 2000Chiron, S., Fernanadez-Alba, A., Rodriguez, A., and Garcia-Calvo, E., Pesticide Chemical Oxidaion: State of art, Water Research, 34, No. 2, 366 (2000).; Gleick, 2002Gleick, P.H., Dirty-water: Estimated Deaths from Water-related Diseases 2000-2020. Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment, and Security (2002).; Misra et al., 2013Misra R., Satyanarayan S., and Potle N., Treatment of agrochemical/pesticide wastewater by coagulation/flocculation process. International Journal of Chemical and Physical Sciences, 2, 38 (2013).).
The existence of pharmaceuticals in various water sources has been cited in the literature (Stackelberg et al., 2004Stackelberg, P.E., Furlong, E.T., Meyer, M.T., Zaugg, S.D., Henderson, A.K., and Reissman, D.B., Persistence of pharmaceutical compounds and other organic wastewater contaminants in a conventional drinking-water-treatment plant, Science of the Total Environment, 329, No. 1, 99 (2004). ; Rabiet et al., 2006Rabiet, M., Togola, A., Brissaud, F., Seidel, J.L., Budzinski, H., and Elbaz-Poulichet, F., Consequences of treated water recycling as regards pharmaceuticals and drugs in surface and ground waters of a medium-sized Mediterranean catchment, Environmental Science and Technology , 40, No. 17, 5282 (2006).; Nikolaou et al., 2007Nikolaou, A., Meric, S., and Fatta, D., Occurrence patterns of pharmaceuticals in water and wastewater environments, Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 387, No. 4, 1225 (2007).; Ryu, 2013Ryu A., Pharmaceutical pollution of water in India: International market failure, Harvard Health Policy Review, 14, 25 (2013).). Non-biodegradability, toxicity, persistence as well as bio-magnification of these organic compounds make it necessary to adopt appropriate methods for treatment of such compounds. Conventional treatment methods are not sufficient enough for the complete removal of these recalcitrant compounds.
In the past few years, advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), including heterogeneous and homogeneous photocatalysis, have proven their credentials with a wide range of applications. Suitable band gap semiconductors such as TiO2 are used as catalysts in heterogeneous photocatalysis to generate the reactive oxygen species (ROS). TiO2 photocatalysis is a clean and economical water treatment technology that does not require any addition of chemical consumables and, moreover, it does not generate any hazardous waste products (Duffy et al., 2004Duffy, E.F., Al-Touati, F., Kehoe, S.C., McLoughlin, O.A., Gill, L.W., Gernjak, W., Oller, I., Maldonado, M.I., Malato, S., Cassidy, J., Reed, R.H., and McGuigan, K.G., A novel TiO2-assisted solar photocatalytic batch-process disinfection reactor for the treatment of biological and chemical contaminants in domestic drinking water in developing countries, Solar Energy, 77, No. 5, 649 (2004).; Trabelsi et al., 2016Trabelsi, H., Atheba, G.P., Hentati, O., Mariette ,Y.D., Robert, D., Drogui, P., and Ksibi, M., Solar Photocatalytic Decolorization and Degradation of Methyl Orange Using Supported TiO2, Journal of Advanced Oxidation Technologies, 19, No. 1, 79 (2016).). Post removal of catalyst from the slurry hinders its commercial viability, although better surface area is available in suspension form (Gurr et al., 2005Gurr, J.R., Wang, A.S., Chen, C.H., and Jan, K.Y., Ultrafine titanium dioxide particles in the absence of photoactivation can induce oxidative damage to human bronchial epithelial cells, Toxicology, 213, No.1, 66 (2005).). Alternatively the catalyst can be immobilized on an inert support (Borges et al., 2015Borges, M., García, D. M., Hernández, T., Ruiz-Morales, J. C., and Esparza, P., Supported Photocatalyst for Removal of Emerging Contaminants from Wastewater in a Continuous Packed-Bed Photoreactor Configuration, Catalysts, 5, 77-87 (2015).), which promotes its stability along with recyclability. However, many studies have been reported in literature regarding the fixing of catalyst on support materials like ceramic paper (Vereb et al., 2014Veréb, G., Ambrus, Z., Pap, Z., Mogyorósi, K., Dombi, A., and Hernádi, K., Immobilization of crystallized photocatalysts on ceramic paper by titanium (IV) ethoxide and photocatalytic decomposition of phenol, Reaction Kinetics, Mechanisms and Catalysis, 113, No. 1, 293-303 (2014).), glass plates, cemented slabs, alginate beads (Verma et al., 2014aVerma, A., Dixit, D., Toor, A., and Srivastava, J., Heterogeneous photocatalytic degradation of 2‐chloro‐4‐nitrophenol using slurry and fixed bed reactor, Environmental Progress and Sustainable Energy,34, No. 2, 380 (2014a).), cement beads (Verma et al., 2014bVerma, A., Prakash, N.T., and Toor, A.P., An efficient TiO2 coated immobilized system for the degradation studies of herbicide isoproturon: Durability studies, Chemosphere , 109, 7 (2014b).), granular expanded clay (Pronina et al., 2015Pronina, N., Klauson, D., Moiseev, A., Deubener, J., & Krichevskaya, M., Titanium dioxide sol-gel-coated expanded clay granules for use in photocatalytic fluidized-bed reactor, Applied Catalysis B: Environmental, 178, 117 (2015).). Cost-effective inert supports and their durability for prolonged use is still an existing need.
The photo-Fenton process offers no mass transfer limitations because of its homogeneous catalytic nature and there is no thermal energy involved as the catalyst makes the process easy to run and control (Neyens and Baeyens, 2003Neyens, E., and Baeyens, J., A review of classic Fenton’s peroxidation as an advanced oxidation technique, Journal of Hazardous Materials, 98, No. 1, 33 (2003).). The presence of a light source speeds up the photo-Fenton reaction, thereby causing fast decomposition of H2O2 by ferrous or ferric ions, resulting in the formation of radicals. Though homogenous photocatalysis leads to higher removal rate (Kwon et al., 1999Kwon, B.G., Lee, D.S., Kang, N., and Yoon, J., Characteristics of p-Chloro-phenol oxidation by Fenton’s reagent, Water Research , 33, No. 9, 2110 (1999).), removal of iron ions at the end of treatment is quite expensive and difficult. However in a heterogeneous photo-Fenton process, the catalyst is easily recovered either by filtration or sedimentation and can be used again. Different iron sources can be used as heterogeneous catalysts. Different iron oxides and iron powder have been tested (Lucking et al., 1998Lücking, F., Köser, H., Jank, M., and Ritter, A., Iron powder, graphite and activated carbon as catalysts for the oxidation of 4-chlorophenol with hydrogen peroxide in aqueous solution, Water Research , 32, No. 9, 2607 (1998). ). Different materials can be used as hetero-Fenton catalysts, including Fe-treated laponite, iron exchanged zeolite (Tekbas et al., 2008 Tekbaş, M., Yatmaz, H.C., and Bektaş, N., Heterogeneous photo-Fenton oxidation of reactive azo dye solutions using iron exchanged zeolite as a catalyst, Microporous and Mesoporous Materials, 115, No. 3, 594 (2008).), iron loaded resin (Cheng et al., 2004Cheng, M.M., Ma, W.H., Li, J., Huang, Y.P., Zhao, J.C., Wen, Y.X. and Xu, Y.M., Visible light assisted degradation of dye pollutants over Fe(III)- loaded resin in the presence of H2O2 at neutral pH values, Environmental Science and Technology, 38, No. 5, 1569 (2004).), Fe3O4, Fe2O3 and S-doped Fe2O3 (Feng et al., 2004Feng, J., Hu, X., and Yue, P.L., Discoloration and Mineralization of Orange II Using Different Heterogeneous Catalysts Containing Fe: A Comparative Study, Environmental Science and Technology , 38, No. 21, 5773 (2004).).
The present study attempts the photodegradation of 2Cl4NP using cement beads and clay beads coated with TiO2 (investigations not reported earlier). The process is optimized in slurry mode to select the better /optimized conditions for degradation of 2Cl4NP. Durability of the support is confirmed by effectively recycling the coated beads. Attempts have also been made to carry out the degradation of 2Cl4NP through a heterogeneous solar photo-Fenton process using Foundry sand as an alternative iron source.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Chemicals
Technical grade (97%) 2-Chloro-4-nitrophenol (2Cl4NP), ClC6H3(NO2)OH (Figure S1) was obtained from Sigma Aldrich and used as such without any further purification. TiO2 (a mixture of Anatase and Rutile form of titanium dioxide in the ratio of 70:30) obtained from Evonik Industries, India, was used as a photocatalyst. Hydrogen Peroxide (H2O2) (30% w/v) (Ranbaxy laboratories) was used as an oxidant/electron acceptor. Concentrated HCl and NaOH, obtained from Merck were employed for adjusting the pH. In the solar photo-Fenton reaction, waste foundry sand (FS) was received from a local industry as a gift sample and used without any modifications. Double distilled water was used in all the experiments.
Immobilization of TiO 2 on cement and clay beads
Different sized spherical cement beads (around 200 in number) were made manually using an appropriate amount of cement and sand. Around 50 beads of uniform size (13 mm diameter) were chosen for immobilization. Similarly spherical shaped clay beads were made using clay. Beads were coated with TiO2 through a dip coating method as mentioned in previous studies (Verma et al., 2014bVerma, A., Prakash, N.T., and Toor, A.P., An efficient TiO2 coated immobilized system for the degradation studies of herbicide isoproturon: Durability studies, Chemosphere , 109, 7 (2014b).). Two coatings were sufficient for a uniform layer of catalyst on the beads. After each coating, the beads were calcined at 400 oC for proper catalyst intactness. The beads were washed with water after the final coating to remove loosely intact catalyst particles. Figure 1(a) and 1(b) shows TiO2 coated cement and clay beads, respectively.
Experimental Procedure
A 1000 mL borosilicate glass bowl (17 cm diameter and 5 cm height) was used as a batch reactor for photocatalytic reactions. The batch reactor was placed on a laboratory jack in a wooden UV chamber (1.37 m × 0.9 m × 1.0 m). Eight 36W UV tubes (Philips), which have a wavelength of 365 nm, were attached on the underside of the roof to get the required intensity for degradation (Toor et al., 2006Toor, A.P., Verma, A., Singh, V., Jotshi, C.K., and Bajpai, P.K., Photocatalytic degradation of Direct Yellow 12 dye using UV/TiO2 in a shallow pond slurry reactor, Dyes and Pigments , 68, No. 1, 53 (2006).). The UV tubes were switched on 30-40 minutes prior to the start of the experiment for a stabilized photon flux. The UV intensity was varied between 10 and 25 Wm-2 by adjusting the distance between reactor and the tubes. The UV intensity was measured using an Eppley radiometer (model no.-33013). For controlling the temperature of the chamber, an exhaust fan was provided and temperature was maintained in the range of 30-35 oC throughout the experiment. A working solution of 50 mg L-1 was made by dissolving 50 mg of 2Cl4NP in 1L of double distilled water with continuous stirring overnight and the solution was stored at room temperature.
For slurry and immobilized photocatalysis, 50 mgL-1 of 2Cl4NP solution (200 mL) was taken in a batch reactor. A suitable amount of TiO2 was added to the solution in the case of slurry photocatalysis and aeration was done by spargers. In the immobilized studies, a sufficient number of TiO2 coated beads covering the entire bottom surface of the reactor was used and two spargers were used for aeration to maintain the homogeneity of reaction. Photo-Fenton studies were carried out using same reactor (as mentioned above) under natural solar light. Known amounts of FS and the oxidant H2O2 were added to the aqueous solution of 2Cl4NP. The reactor was placed on a magnetic stirrer for continuous stirring except for fixed-bed studies. At regular intervals of time, a sample was collected (3-4 mL) from the vessel and was filtered through a 0.45µm syringe filter. Analysis of these samples was done by UV-Vis spectrophotometer.
Different operating parameters like the effect of photocatalyst, UV intensity, pH, FS concentration, addition of oxidant, A/V ratio were studied and optimized in photocatalytic as well as photo-Fenton processes. All solar experiments were carried out during the months from April to June, 2015, from 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. at Patiala (30.3400° N, 76.3800° E), India. The experiments were performed thrice for reproducibility of results. For all the experiments, the standard deviation was in the range of 3-5%.
Chemical Analysis
The degradation of 2Cl4NP was studied using a UV-Vis spectrophotometer (HITACHI model no. U-2800), using the λmax at 266 nm. HPLC [Shimazdu, SED-20A] analysis was also carried out for confirming 2Cl4NP degradation. HPLC was conducted with a binary HPLC system with C-18 column (250 mm × 4.60 mm), particle size 5 µm using acetonitirile:water (70:30) as mobile phase with UV detection at 266 nm for 2Cl4NP. Flow rate was maintained at 1.0 mL min-1. Standard methods as per the American Public Health Association (APHA) were used to measure iron (APHA 2012: Sec. 3111(B)), aluminum (APHA 2012: Sec. 3111(D)) for FS, COD (APHA 2012: Sec. 5220 (D)) and nitrate ions (APHA, 1989: Sec. 4500-NO3 (E)).
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Photolytic and Adsorption studies
In the current study, adsorption and photolytic experiments were carried out as control prior to photocatalytic studies. Photolysis studies were performed in a batch reactor by irradiating the 2Cl4NP solution with UV light (UV only) in the absence of photocatalyst in which only a negligible amount of degradation (6%) was observed. Adsorption studies (TiO2 only) showed 7.5% reduction in the concentration of 2Cl4NP, which may be due to the development of a monolayer of pollutant on the surface of the catalyst. The formation of monolayer blocks all active sites on the surface of the catalyst, due to which no further decrease in degradation was observed. In the presence of oxidant (H2O2 only), almost 10% degradation of the compound was observed. The combination of H2O2 + TiO2 + UV showed 91.75% degradation in 120 min, as depicted in Figure 2. Blank experiments were performed using bare cement and clay beads (without catalyst coating), which led to 8.5% and 7% reduction in the concentration of compound after 5h, whereas 6% degradation of compound was attained in the presence of only foundry sand. It can therefore be presumed that adsorption-desorption of 2Cl4NP along with reaction intermediates are reasonably slower than electron/hole pair formation (Lapertot et al., 2007Lapertot, M., Ebrahimi, S., Dazio, S., Rubinelli, A., and Pulgarin, C., Photo-Fenton and biological integrated process for degradation of a mixture of pesticides, Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology A , 186, No. 1, 34 (2007).).
. Preliminary experiments performed under different conditions to evaluate their efficiency towards degradation of 2Cl4NP.
Photodegradation kinetics
Kinetics of photocatalytic reactions are now well established to be first order according to a Langmuir-Hinshelwood (L-H) kinetic model, i.e.,
The value of the rate constant, k, was evaluated by plotting a linear graph between the natural logarithm of the change in concentration of 2Cl4NP (ln C0/C) and irradiation time, t, and was then further used in kinetic studies.
Heterogeneous photocatalysis using suspended TiO 2 :
Effect of TiO 2 concentration
Photocatalyst concentration greatly affects the rate of photocatalytic reaction as an optimized catalyst concentration ensures effective absorption of all the photons (Saquib and Muneer, 2003Saquib, M., and Muneer, M., TiO2-mediated photocatalytic degradation of a triphenylmethane dye (gentian violet), in aqueous suspensions, Dyes and Pigments, 56, No. 1, 37 (2003). ). Overdose of catalyst causes a reduction in the penetration of light into the solution as well as undesirable scattering of light (Chun et al., 2000Chun, H., Yizhong, W., and Hongxiao, T., Destruction of phenol aqueous solution by photocatalysis or direct photolysis, Chemosphere, 41, No. 8, 1205 (2000).). To determine the optimum concentration of TiO2, it was varied between 0.5 -1.5 gL-1. The degradation rate increased with increase in catalyst loading up to 1.0 gL-1 and thereafter started declining at higher catalyst dose (Figure 3(a)), which may be due to the above discussed reasons. The other reason for this might be the decrease in catalyst surface area available for light absorption at higher concentration of catalyst. The number of active sites on the surface of the catalyst increases with the increase in the catalyst amount, but after a certain dose penetration of light gets affected due to an excessive particle concentration. However, there was a very slight increase in the value of the degradation rate k from 0.007-0.0075 min-1 when the TiO2 dose was increased from 0.75-1.0 g L-1; the optimized dose of photocatalyst selected in our study was 0.75 g L-1 as the lower catalyst dose is always preferred for commercial applications.
Effect of pH
In the present study, the pH was varied between 4 and 9 with the optimized dose of TiO2, i.e., 0.75 g L-1 and maximum degradation was achieved in acidic conditions, i.e., at pH 4 (Figure 3 b). The value of the degradation rate constant k decreased from 0.008976 min-1 to 0.001 min-1 with the increase in the pH from 4 to 9. TiO2 depicts the amphoteric nature as its surface shows positive and negative charge below and above the point of its zero charge at pH 6.5, as is clear from the following equations (Verma et al., 2013Verma, A., Kaur, H., and Dixit, D., Photocatalytic, Sonolytic and Sonophotocatalytic Degradation of 4-chloro-2nitro phenol, Archives of Environmental Protection 39, No. 2, 17 (2013).):
For the HO2 radical, a higher pH value (> pKa) leads the reaction to move in the reverse direction. The insufficient amount of HO2 radicals hinders the degradation process. Therefore, the reaction of positive holes with water and OH- on the surface of titanium dioxide leads to the generation of OH free radicals. Okamoto et al. (1985Okamoto, K. I., Yamamoto, Y., Tanaka, H., Tanaka, M., and Itaya, A., Heterogeneous photocatalytic decomposition of phenol over TiO2 powder, Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan, 58, No. 7, 2015 (1985).) reported that generation of OH free radicals was basically from H2O2, which did not favor the degradation of 2Cl4NP at a high pH region. The optimized pH for all reactions in our study was 4.
Effect of oxidant addition
The role of adding oxidants or electron acceptors in TiO2 photocatalysis is now well established. The oxidants not only prevent the recombination of electron/hole by acquiring the electron from the conduction band, but also promote the production of more oxidizing species and hydroxyl radicals, thereby improving the degradation rate (Singh et al., 2007aSingh, H. K., Saquib, M., Haque, M., Muneera, M., and Bahnemann, D., Titanium dioxide mediated photocatalysed degradation of phenoxyacetic acid and 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid, in aqueous suspensions, Journal of Molecular Catalysis A: Chemical, 264, No. 1, 66 (2007a)., 2007b, 2007c). In our study, to determine the optimum concentration of oxidant (H2O2), it was varied from 0.05 to 0.3 mL/200 mL at the optimized dose of TiO2 0.75 gL-1 and pH 4. Figure 3(c) shows that the rate constant of the degradation reaction of 2Cl4NP initially increased when H2O2 was added in the range of 0.05-0.1 mL/200mL. Thereafter, the degradation rate started declining as the scavenging effect of electron/hole predominates at higher concentration of H2O2 and formation of HO2 occurs (Zhao et al., 2004Zhao, H., Xu, S., Zhong, J., and Bao, X., Kinetic study on the photocatalytic degradation of pyridine in TiO2 suspension systems, Catalysis Today , 93, 857 (2004).). 96% degradation of 2Cl4NP was achieved with 0.1 mL/200mL of H2O2 in the optimized conditions after 120 min of photocatalytic treatment.
. Plot of first order rate constant, k vs variation in TiO2 (a), variation in pH (b), variation in H2O2 (c) during photocatalytic degradation of 2Cl4NP.
Effect of UV intensity
The radiation absorption capacity of catalyst greatly influences the photocatalytic reaction rate (Curco et al., 2002Curco, D., Gime´nez, J., Addardak, A., Cervera-March, S., and Esplugas, S., Effects of radiation absorption and catalyst concentration on the photocatalytic degradation of pollutants, Catalysis Today, 76, 177 (2002).; Karunakaran and Senthilvelan, 2005Karunakaran, C., and Senthilvelan, S., Photooxidation of aniline on alumina with sunlight and artificial UV light, Catalysis Communications, 6, No. 2, 159 (2005).; Qamar et al., 2006Qamar, M., Muneer, M., and Bahnemann, D., Heterogeneous photocatalysed degradation of two selected pesticide derivatives, triclopyr and daminozid in aqueous suspensions of titanium dioxide, Journal of Environmental Management, 80, No. 2, 99 (2006).). To study this effect, the UV intensity was varied from 10-25 W m-2 under optimized conditions for the degradation of 2Cl4NP. The degradation rate constant was found to be increased from 0.014 to 0.017 min-1 as the UV intensity was increased from 10 W m-2 to 25 W m-2 (Figure 4(a)). This might be because of the increase in the production of electron/hole pair on the surface of photocatalyst with increase in light intensity, thereby improving the oxidation of the organic pollutant. In our study, the electrical energy consumption for the treatment of 200 mL of working solution for 2 hours was 12 kWh/m3 as per the literature (Daneshvar et al., 2007Daneshvar, N., Aber, S., Dorraji, M. S. S., Khataee, A. R., and Rasoulifard, M. H., Preparation and investigation of photocatalytic properties of ZnO nanocrystals: Effect of operational parameters and kinetic study, International Scholarly and Scientific Research & Innovation, 1, No. 5, 62 (2007).).
Effect of A/V ratio of the reactor
To study the influence of A/V ratio of the reactor on the degradation of 2Cl4NP, the photocatalytic reactions were carried out in a batch reactor under all optimized conditions. Area by Volume (A/V) of the reactor was varied between 0.907-2.268 cm2mL-1. For better degradation, the effective penetration of light (either UV or solar) into the aqueous solution to be treated is very important and, for this, a greater A/V ratio, i.e., greater area with lesser depth is desired (Toor et al., 2006Toor, A.P., Verma, A., Singh, V., Jotshi, C.K., and Bajpai, P.K., Photocatalytic degradation of Direct Yellow 12 dye using UV/TiO2 in a shallow pond slurry reactor, Dyes and Pigments , 68, No. 1, 53 (2006).). In our case A/V was varied by altering the volume of solution used in the reactor keeping the exposed area constant. It can also be altered the other way by keeping volume of the solution constant and varying the area of exposure. As the volume of the solution was lowered, i.e., increasing the A/V ratio, the degradation rate constant of 2Cl4NP increased from 0.011 min-1 to 0.02 min-1 as shown in Figure 4(b). The increase in degradation is because the depth of the solution decreases and the path length of photons entering the solution increases, resulting in elevated production of OH radicals (Verma et al., 2014cVerma, A., Prakash, N. T., and Toor, A. P., Photocatalytic Degradation of Herbicide Isoproturon in TiO2 Aqueous Suspensions: Study of Reaction Intermediates and Degradation Pathways, Environmental Progress and Sustainable Energy , 33, No. 2, 402 (2014c).).
. Plot of first order rate constant, k vs variation in UV intensity (a), variation in A/V ratio (b) during photocatalytic degradation of 2Cl4NP.
Heterogeneous photocatalysis using supported TiO 2
Degradation of 2Cl4NP using TiO 2 immobilized on cement and clay beads:
To off-set the drawbacks of slurry photocatalysis, fixed-bed studies have been performed for the photodegradation of 2Cl4NP using two different supports (cement beads and clay beads) for the immobilization of TiO2. Experiments were conducted in sunlight using appropriate number of cement beads and clay beads in a batch reactor containing an aqueous solution of 2Cl4NP under all optimized conditions in slurry photocatalysis. 68% and 52% degradation of 2Cl4NP was obtained after 5 h of photocatalytic treatment using cement beads and clay beads, respectively, as depicted in Figure 5. The pH of the solution continuously increased during the course of reaction and degradation decreased (as discussed in the pH section). For this reason, the acidic pH of the solution was maintained by continuous addition of acid to sustain the degradation of 2Cl4NP. With certain modifications, a continuous/semi-continuous solar reactor can be designed with optimized parameters for field-scale applications. In fact this is the first reported study for the degradation of 2Cl4NP using clay beads and cement beads as inert support material for immobilization of the catalyst.
. Degradation of 2Cl4NP by bare cement and clay beads and effect of TiO2 coated cement and clay beads
Recyclability Studies:
In fixed-bed photocatalysis, the durability of supported catalyst is very important aspect as far as its field-scale applications are concerned. The activity of immobilized catalyst decreases after certain runs due to either catalyst fouling or loss of catalyst from the surface. Some studies have reported high temperature (480°C) reactivation of the catalyst, which is generally not good from an economical point of view. With this view, efforts have been done to check the durability of immobilized catalyst on cement and clay beads for the degradation of 2Cl4NP. The cement and clay beads were recycled for 10 cycles without much decrease in its photocatalytic efficiency for degradation of 2Cl4NP as shown in Figure 6(i) . For reactivation of the beads, they were heated in an oven or muffle at 100°C for one hour after every cycle. Photocatalytic activity of the beads may have reduced somewhat because of the loss of catalyst during the reaction or blocking of catalyst sites. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images and Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) analysis showed that the catalyst was intact on clay and cement beads even after 10 cycles as shown in Figure 6(ii) and 6(iii), which proved its stability. More effective methods of catalyst immobilization, durable support and efficient reactor design can prevent/minimize the aforesaid problems.
. Recyclability Studies of TiO2 coated cement and clay beads for the degradation of 2Cl4NP
. SEM images (a) blank clay bead without TiO2 coating (b) freshly coated TiO2 clay bead (c) used clay bead after 10 cycles along with their EDS data.
. SEM images (a) blank cement bead without TiO2 coating (b) freshly coated TiO2 cement bead (c) used cement bead after 10 cycles along with their EDS data.
Degradation studies using the solar photo-Fenton process:
Effect of oxidant addition
In the present study, H2O2 was varied between 0.05 and 0.25 mL/200mL for degradation of 2Cl4NP solution by keeping the other conditions constant (pH 3, FS=0.1 gm). Figure 7(a) shows that 93.56% degradation was achieved at 0.05 mL H2O2 and thereafter degradation decreased, which might be due to the prevailing scavenging effects of hydroxyl radical. The Fenton reaction is inhibited by an excessive amount of hydrogen peroxide as it reacts with hydroxyl radical and produces a less reactive hydroperoxyl radical according to equation (3) (Walling, 1975Walling, C., Fenton’s reagent revisited. Accounts of Chemical Research, 8, No. 4, 125 (1975).).
Also in the oxidation reaction, an excess amount of H2O2 reacts with ferric ions, yielding Fe (III)- hydroperoxy complexes (Laat and Gallard, 1999Laat, J., and Gallard, H., Catalytic decomposition of hydrogen peroxide by Fe(III) in homogeneous aqueous solution: mechanism and kinetic modeling, Environmental Science and Technology , 33, No. 16, 2726 (1999).), which reduces the ferrous ions required for the Fenton reaction.
Effect of foundry sand concentration
Ferrous iron behaves like a catalyst in the Fenton reaction, which directs the oxidation of pollutants. In our study, foundry sand was used as an alternative iron source since SEM-EDS analysis of FS confirmed the presence of iron and aluminum required for the Fenton reaction. FS was varied between 0.05-0.25 g at the optimized dose of 0.05 mL H2O2 and pH 3. It was observed that the removal efficiency of 2Cl4NP increased with an increase in addition of FS from 0.05 g to 0.1 g and then started decreasing with further addition (figure 7 b). The reason for the initial increase in degradation of 2Cl4NP is the consumption of H2O2 by ferrous ions, thereby increasing the production of more hydroxyl radicals. Excessive ferrous iron (>0.1 g) shows a scavenging effect of hydroxyl radical, thus reducing the degradation rate, as depicted in equation (4) (Buxton et al., 1988Buxton, G.V., Greenstock, C.L., Helman, W.P. and Ross, A.B., Critical-review of rate constants for reactions of hydrated electrons, hydrogen-atoms and hydroxyl radicals (.OH/.O-) in aqueous solution, The Journal of Physical Chemistry, 17, No. 2, 513 (1988).). After 60 min, degradation was similar for different amounts of sand (0.05-0.25 g), but we selected 0.1 g sand because the rate of degradation is fast as compared to the others and 97.19 % degradation was achieved in 105 min.
Effect of Iron Leaching
Handling and disposal of FS is difficult and it adds other pollutants to water, posing a threat to the environment. Efforts have been made in the present study to leach out iron from foundry sand in dissolved form to carry out photo-Fenton studies. For this, iron was leached in acidic water (pH 3) by dipping 0.1 gm of sand in 200 mL distilled water for 1 hr. Atomic Absorption Spectroscopic (AAS) analysis of the above solution revealed the presence of sufficient amounts of iron (0.26 mgL-1) and aluminum (<2.5 mgL-1) which can be used in the solar photo-Fenton reaction as catalyst. It can therefore be indicated that the iron:2Cl4NP dose used was 0.0052. The reaction was carried out in sunlight with an average intensity of 25 Wm-2 adding 0.05mL H2O2 to the above solution. 87 % degradation was achieved in 180 min as shown in Figure 7(c).
. Percentage degradation of 2Cl4NP at varying (a) concentration of H2O2 (b) concentration of Foundry sand (c) Effect of leached out iron from FS on 2Cl4NP degradation during photo-Fenton Process.
Mineralization Studies
Transformation of all the carbon atoms into gaseous CO2 and the hetero-atoms to inorganic anions confirms the complete mineralization of pollutant (Evgenidou et al., 2005Evgenidou, E., Fytianos, K., and Poulios, I., Photocatalytic oxidation of dimethoate in aqueous solutions. Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology A, 175, No. 1, 29 (2005).). The subsequent degradation of the compound was confirmed through HPLC analysis as peaks of the parent compound almost disappeared in HPLC chromatograms after 75 min of treatment (Figure S3), but the reaction continued to 2 h so that the other impurities/intermediates present may be degraded, which was subsequently confirmed through COD and nitrate ion generation. Approximately a 75% decrease in COD along with 85% production of nitrate ions was observed after 2 h of treatment (Figure S2).
CONCLUSIONS
The photodegradation efficiency of heterogeneous photocatalysis using slurry, immobilized form and heterogeneous solar photo-Fenton process (using FS) has been evaluated for the degradation of 2Cl4NP. Slurry photocatalysis yielded 96% degradation of 2Cl4NP in 120 min while 52% and 68% degradation of the compound was achieved in fixed-bed photocatalysis after 5 h using clay and cement beads, respectively. In the case of solar photo-Fenton process, 97.19% degradation was obtained in 105 min. The optimized values of the operating parameters in the case of TiO2 photocatalysis were: TiO2= 0.75 gL-1, pH= 4, H2O2= 0.1 mL/200 mL and in the case of the solar photo-Fenton process, the optimized conditions were: H2O2= 0.05 mL/200 mL, FS= 0.1 g. The coated beads were effectively recycled for ten cycles, a study reported for the first time. The complete mineralization of 2Cl4NP was assured with 75 % reduction in COD as well as elimination of the parent compound peak in HPLC chromatograms.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study was supported by a grant from DRDO, New Delhi (India) and The Institution of Engineers (India).
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
July 2017
History
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Received
02 Nov 2015 -
Reviewed
12 Apr 2016 -
Accepted
18 Apr 2016