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Photomineralization of n-alkanoic acids in aqueous solution by photocatalytic membranes. Influence of trialkyl vanadates as catalytic promoters of immobilized titanium dioxide
Authors:Laura Rivas  Ignazio Renato Bellobono  Francesco Ascari
Institution:

Department of Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry, University of Milan; via C. Golgi, 19, I-20133, Milan, Italy

Abstract:The Ti02-mediated photomineralization of 8–1000 ppm of methanoic acid, of 6–100 ppm of ethanoic acid, of 6–180 ppm of propanoic acid, and of 6–90 ppm of n-decanoic acid in aqueous solutions was studied at 296± 2 K or 308 ± 2 K, with low and high pressure mercury arc lamps (radiant power in the absorption range 8 and 145 W respectively), using PHOTOPERM® CPP/313 membranes containing immobilized 30±3 wt.% Ti02, and, in parallel runs, 7 wt.% of a synergic mixture of tri(t-butyl)- and tri-(i-propyl) vanadate(V) as photocatalytic promoter. Stoichiometric H202 was used or, in some of the runs, 03, at saturation, as oxygen suppliers. Disappearance of total organic carbon (TOC) was followed as a function of time. To fit kinetic curves up to complete photomineralization, a kinetic model was employed, already used successfully in previous studies, which considers appearance and disappearance of all intermediates, as if they were represented by a hypothetical single molecule, mediating all of them. The photocatalytic activity of trialkyl vanadates was evaluated from quantum yields at “infinite” concentration, with respect to the maximum allowable efficiencies. When using O3, a dark catalysis effect clearly appeared towards intermediate species produced during the photocatalysed degradation.
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