Solar-Assisted Photodegradation of Pesticides Over Pellet-Shaped TiO2-Kaolin Catalytic Macrocomposites at Semi-pilot-Plant Scale: Elucidation of Photo-Mechanisms and Water Matrix Effect

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Identifiers

Publication date

Authors

Jiménez Bautista, Karla Cecilia
Gascó, Antonio
Palomo, E.
Muelas-Ramos, Virginia
Hermosilla, Daphne
Bahamonde Santos, Ana María

Advisors

Other responsabilities

Journal Title

Bibliographic citation

K. Jiménez-Bautista, A. Gascó, D.R. Ramos, E. Palomo, V. Muelas-Ramos, M. Canle, D. Hermosilla, A. Bahamonde, Solar-assisted photodegradation of pesticides over pellet-shaped TiO2-kaolin catalytic macrocomposites at semi-pilot-plant scale: Elucidation of photo-mechanisms and water matrix effect, Journal of Cleaner Production, Volume 426, 2023, 139203, ISSN 0959-6526, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.139203. (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652623033619)

Type of academic work

Academic degree

Abstract

[Abstract] The behavior of novel pellet-shaped bulky titania-kaolin photocatalysts is herein evaluated for its application in the solar-assisted photocatalytic treatment of a bio-recalcitrant pesticide mix (imidacloprid, pyrimethanil and methomyl) in solar lab-scale and semi-pilot scale raceway pond photoreactors. The photocatalyst consists of 1 cm long titania-kaolin macro-composites that combine some advantages of both nanoparticulate and supported catalysts without being either. This opening the opportunity to extend the use of this photocatalyst to complex wastewater effluents. In addition, their stability and reusability potential was also evaluated, and reactive species leading to the solar-degradation of each pesticide were also identified using radical scavengers. Total removal of pesticides (2 mg L−1 each) with an optimal pellets dosage of 34.8 g L−1 was addressed, whether in ultrapure water (180–270 min of solar irradiation) or in two basic pH Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plant (MWWTP) effluents (≤300 min of solar irradiation) where methomyl was always the most recalcitrant pesticide. Lower Total Organic Carbon (TOC) removal (≈53–56%) was also found under the effect of these complex MWWTP effluents than in ultrapure water (>60%). Those results are very promising when comparing to the almost negligible TOC removal achieved with the Titania powder under basic MWWTP effluents due to the strong effect of particle aggregation. Very good photocatalyst stability and durability was shown along three consecutive cycles after applying a low-cost recovery protocol consisting of several washing and drying cycles without addressing a significant photoefficiency loss (TOC≈60-56%). The application of scavengers revealed that hydroxyl radical generated from photoinduced holes was the dominant species in the degradation of pyrimethanil and methomyl whereas reactive oxygen species formed from conduction band electrons were mainly involved in the photo-oxidation of imidacloprid.

Description

Rights

Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0 Internacional
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0 Internacional

Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0 Internacional