Development of a Novel Microgap Reactor System for the Photocatalytic Degradation of Micropollutants from Aqueous Solutions with TiO2-Based Photocatalysts Immobilized by Spray Coating

2021 
The presented investigation focuses on the development of a novel microgap reactor concept for the photocatalytic degradation of micropollutants from aqueous solutions with titanium dioxide-based catalysts immobilized by spray coating. Combinatorial experiment designs were utilized in order to study the influence of the microgap width, irradiance and catalyst layer thickness on the conversion of 17 α-ethinyl estradiol. The impact of catalyst-doping is discussed as well. Regarding conversion analyses, LC-MS/MS and GC-MS techniques were deployed, while XRD, ESEM and BET were utilized for catalyst characterization. The results show that the built-up microgap reactor system enables a conversion of 65% within a residence time of 2.7 min with UV-A irradiation and under steady flow conditions. Thus, the presented bench scale photocatalysis reactor provides promising fundamental findings for the future development of pilot scale approaches. With the deployment of industrial catalysts and base materials, microgap reactor photocatalytic degradation represents an attractive technology for large-scale application.
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