The present disclosure relates to catalytic compositions, composition production methods, and aqueous solution treatment methods.
Since the discovery of photoelectrochemical splitting of water on n-TiO2 electrodes by Fujishima and Honda in 1972, semiconductor-based materials have been investigated extensively as photocatalysts for both solar energy conversion and environmental applications. Due to its high chemical stability, good photoactivity, relatively low cost and nontoxicity, TiO2 has appeared as a candidate among various semiconductor-based photocatalysts, especially for industrial use. The photocatalytic capability of TiO2 can require ultraviolet light (λ<400 nm) illumination due to its relatively wide band gap (˜3.2 eV for anatase TiO2), which can limit its solar efficiency.
Anionic doping of n-TiO2 photocatalyst can extend the optical absorbance of TiO2 into the visible-light region. Anionic nonmetal dopants, such as nitrogen, carbon, sulfur, or fluorine, have been explored for visible-light photocatalysis so that a greater portion of the solar spectrum or just indoor light may be used to provide photocatalytic capability. Anion-doping can provide massive charge carrier recombination, which can limit the photoactivity of anion-doped TiO2 under visible light illumination. Anion-doped TiO2 photocatalysts can also lose their photocatalytic capability in the dark environment, where they may not produce electron and hole pairs.
It would be most desirable to design a visible-light photocatalyst system which can provide enhanced photocatalytic efficiency by minimizing charge carrier recombination. It would be even better if the improved photocatalyst can store some of its photocatalytic activity in “memory” so that once the photoexcitation is turned off, the catalyst still remains active for an extended period of time.
Catalytic compositions are provided that can include a substrate supporting Ti, O, N, and Pd.
Bactericides are provided that can include Ti, O, N, and Pd.
Composition production methods are provided that can include providing PdO nanoparticles on a nitrogen-doped titanium oxide surface to form a catalytic mixture.
Water purification methods are provided that can include exposing an aqueous solution to a composition comprising at least a substrate supporting Ti, O, N, and Pd.
Photocatalytic methods are provided that can include: providing a composition comprising one or both of Ti and Pd; exposing the composition to visible radiation to activate the composition; and in the substantial absence of the visible radiation, contacting the composition with an aqueous solution to purify the aqueous solution.
Embodiments of the disclosure provide visible light photocatalysts based on palladium oxide nanoparticles dispersed on nitrogen-doped n-TiO2. These catalysts can be referred to as TiON/PdO. Implementations of the catalyst can demonstrate not only fast photocatalytic disinfection rates on Escherichia coli (E. coli) under visible light illumination as compared to nitrogen-doped titanium oxide (TiON), but, also a “memory” catalytic disinfection capability after visible light illumination is turned off for periods up to 8 hours.
Embodiments of the disclosure are described below with reference to the following accompanying drawings.
Embodiments of the catalytic compositions, composition production methods, and aqueous solution treatment methods with be described with reference to
To substrate 12 can be provided mixture 14. Mixture 14 can include one or more Ti and transitional metal oxides such as Pd, Ag, Fe, and/or Cu. These metals can be in oxide form, for example, TiO2, and PdO. Example compositions and methods for preparing same can be found in Published United States Patent applications: 20070190765 A1, filed Dec. 22, 2006 and entitled QUATERNARY OXIDES AND CATALYSTS CONTAINING QUATERNARY OXIDES; and 20070202334 A1, filed Dec. 22, 2006 and entitled NANOPARTICLES CONTAINING TITANIUM OXIDE, the entirety of both of which are incorporated by reference herein.
According to example implementations, production methods can include providing PdO nanoparticles on a nitrogen-doped titanium oxide surface to form a catalytic mixture. Mixture 14 can be prepared as a precursor solution. For example, preparation of palladium-modified nitrogen-doped titanium oxide (TiON/PdO) precursor solutions can be completed at room temperature in a sol-gel process. The process can include dissolving tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMA, 25 wt % in methanol, Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A.) in ethyl alcohol (EtOH, 100%, AAPER Alcohol and Chemical Co., Shelbyville, Ky., U.S.A.) at a mol ratio at 1:10. The solution can then be stirred magnetically for about 5 min, and titanium tetraisopropoxide (TTIP, 97%, Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A.) can be added into the solution with the TMA:TTIP mol ratio at 1:5. A proper amount of palladium acetylacetonate (Pd(acac)2, 99%, Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A.) can be dissolved in dichloromethane (CH2Cl2, 99.6%, Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A.), and then added into the TMA/TTIP/EtOH mixture to achieve desired Pd:Ti mol ratio at 0.5%.
After stirring for 5 min to get a homogeneous TiON/PdO precursor solution, substrate 12 such as activated carbon glass fiber can be soaked into it for 24 h. After being removed from the precursor solution and following washing in EtOH, the soaked template can be left in air and the hydrolysis of precursors initiated by exposure to the moisture in air. After further hydrolysis and drying, the composition can be calcined in air for 3 hours and a composition of TiON/PdO on glass fiber obtained. For comparison purpose, nitrogen-doped titanium oxide (TiON) photocatalytic fiber sample can be synthesized a similar method with the exception of the addition of palladium precursor.
In accordance with example implementations a catalytic composition comprising substrate 12 supporting mixture 14 can be prepared. Mixture 14 can include Ti, O, N, and Pd. The Ti can be in the form of TiO2 and can be supplemented with N. As an example, the TiO2 can be doped with N to form n-TiO2 particles. The Pd of mixture 14 can be dispersed on the n-TiO2 particles, for example. The Pd is in the form of PdO. Supported composition 14 can be photocatalytic and can remain catalytically active in the absence of visible radiation. Supported composition 14 can be a bactericide, for example.
Referring to
Referring first to
b depicts the representative XPS survey spectrum of TiON/PdO fibers, which can demonstrate the existence of N, O, Pd and Ti. Due to the widespread presence of carbon in the environment, C 1s peak is also in XPS survey spectrum. The relative elemental composition ratio can be determined by multiplex high-resolution scans over N 1s, O 1s, Pd 3d, and Ti 2p spectral regions. An average surface N/Ti atomic ratio of ˜0.10 can be found, and the surface Pd/Ti atomic ratio can be at ˜0.03. The inset plot demonstrates the magnified survey spectra over Pd 3d spectral region of TiON/PdO fibers and depicts the existence of Pd additive as PdO in TiON/PdO powder because the binding energy of Pd 3d5/2 is ˜336.20 eV, which is in agreement with the XRD observation.
a) represents an SEM image, and 3(b) an STEM image of supported composition 14. Supported compositions 14 can be analyzed by X-ray diffraction (XRD) on a Rigaku D-Max X-ray powder diffractometer (Rigaku Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) with Ni-filtered Cu (0.15418 nm) radiation at 45 kV and 20 mA. XPS measurements can be made on Physical Electronics PHI 5400 X-ray Photoelectron Spectrometer (Perkin-Elmer Corporation, Eden Prairie, Minn., U.S.A.) with an Mg K anode (1253.6 eV photon energy, 15 kV, 300 W) at a take-off angle of 45°. The SEM image of the TiON/PdO photocatalytic fibers (
Referring next to
The mixture 14 of the composition can be exposed to visible radiation 44. This can activate the composition, for example. As shown in
Referring to
Mixture 14 can be catalytically activated in the absence of the solution and then exposed to solution 42 to purify solution 42 and form solution 46.
As part of either of the methods depicted in
As an example, the method can include providing a composition comprising one or both of Ti and Pd, such as mixture 14. The composition can be exposed to visible radiation to activate the composition, and, in the substantial absence of the visible radiation, the composition can be contacted with an aqueous solution to purify the aqueous solution.
Without limiting the scope of the disclosure, it may be that these antimicrobial properties of TiON/PdO may be derived from the optoelectronic coupling between the PdO nanoparticles and the TiON semiconductor, which can promote the charge carrier separation in TiON and results in the chemical reduction of PdO to Pd0. While the separation of the charge carriers can enhance the visible light photocatalytic killing of E. coli, a “memory” antimicrobial effect may result from the catalytic effect of Pd0. The antimicrobial effects of TiON/PdO photocatalyst under visible light illumination and their post-illumination activity provide for new implementations, such as continuous solar-powered disinfection during daytime and at night, for a broad range of environmental applications.
The optical property of TiON/PdO can be compared with both TiON and TiO2. The optical absorbance of TiON/PdO can be determined from the diffuse reflectance measurements of sol-gel TiON/PdO nanoparticle powders, which can be synthesized with the same sol-gel process as the TiON/PdO fibers without utilizing the fiber soaking procedure. These TiON/PdO nanoparticle powders have similar crystal structure and composition with their counterparts in the fiber form and can be used in the optical measurement here for the experimental convenience. The optical absorbance can be approximated from the reflectance data by the Kubelka-Munk function, as given by Eq. (1):
where R is the diffuse reflectance.
The photocatalytic activity of TiON/PdO can be measured by testing on wild type E. coli AN 387. For this purpose, E. coli cells can be suspended in a buffer solution with TiON/PdO fiber samples and exposed to visible light (λ>400 nm) for varying time intervals. The same procedure can be followed for the TiON fiber samples. The buffer solution itself may keep E. coli alive up to 2 weeks. The survival ratio of E. coli can be determined by the ratio of Nt/N0, where N0 and Nt are the numbers of colony-forming units at the initial and each following time interval, respectively.
The disinfection properties of TiON/PdO can be further examined after light exposure. Photocatalytic fiber samples can first be illuminated by the same lamp for ˜10 h to simulate the day-time visible light illumination condition. The lamp can then be switched off, and the disinfection of E. coli conducted in the same experimental setup as the photocatalytic disinfection experiment described above, only without the light illumination.
To clarify the role of PdO nanoparticles in the enhancement of photocatalytic disinfection efficiency under visible light illumination and the “memory” catalytic disinfection capability after the light is off, two comparison experiments can be conducted. TiO2/PdO can be prepared with the same procedure as TiON/PdO, but without the nitrogen doping. TiO2/PdO may show little bactericidal effect under the similar visible light illumination or after light exposure. The TiON/PdO fiber can be kept in the dark for more than 24 h after the light exposure, before using them to interact with E. coli without light illumination and no significant bactericidal effect can be observed. TiON/PdO by itself is not toxic to E. coli. Pd dopants themselves, including Pd species possibly leached into the E. coli cell suspension, could not contribute much to the disinfection of E. coli. Otherwise, high disinfection efficiency would be observed in TiO2/PdO or TiON/PdO with/without light illumination. The enhancement of photocatalytic disinfection efficiency under visible light illumination may be related to the interaction between TiON and PdO, and the bactericidal effect observed in the dark is rather related to the prior illumination of TiON/PdO by visible light before the light is turned off, hence the “memory” effect.
The “memory” effect can be further examined by investigating the interactions between TiON/PdO fiber samples with a commonly used model pollutant, methylene blue (MB), without the light illumination. Two TiON/PdO samples can first be kept in dark for 24 h. One sample can then be illuminated by the same lamp for ˜10 h to simulate the day-time visible light illumination condition, while the other sample can still be kept in dark. After the lamp may be switched off, the interaction between TiON/PdO fiber and MB solution on both samples can be observed without the light illumination. After varying time intervals, the light absorption of the clear solution can be measured and the remaining percentage of MB in the solution can be calculated by the ratio between the light absorptions of TiON/PdO treated and untreated MB solutions.
In the TiON/PdO photocatalytic material system, electron-hole pairs can be produced under visible light illumination. The changes in PdO nanoparticles following light exposure can be examined by an in-situ XPS analysis, which showed the reduction of PdO to metallic Pd0.
When electrons move from TiON to PdO nanoparticles, the PdO semiconductor nanoparticles can be reduced on the surface to metallic Pd0 nanoparticles so that these electrons are locally trapped at these nanoparticles. The trapping of charge carriers can decrease the e−/h+ pair recombination rate and subsequently increase the lifetime of charge carriers, which can be beneficial to improve the photoactivity, as observed in
O2+e−→O2− (2)
2O2−+2H+→2.OH+O2 (3)
Both O2− and .OH are highly reactive radicals, which can provide TiON/PdO with the post-exposure catalytic disinfection capability on E. coli bacteria and degradation effect on MB.
To verify the formation of reactive radicals by TiON/PdO, spin trapping EPR measurements can be conducted on TiON/PdO sol-gel powders both under visible light illumination and in the dark with two different spin trapping chemicals, including DMPO and POBN. Before the measurement, a Fenton reaction can be first conducted in comparison and as proof of the correct instrumentation.
Compared with DMPO which may interact with various radicals, POBN can specifically interact with .OH radicals. Thus, the spin trapping EPR measurement can be furthered with POBN.
Although the post-illumination catalytic disinfection efficiency is not as high as the photocatalytic disinfection efficiency under visible light illumination, the inactivation rate from the “memory” effect is still comparable to those of TiON powder under visible light illumination or TiO2 under UV irradiation, which are roughly 50% reduction in E. Coli concentration after 4 h of light or UV activation. After 8 h of stay in the dark, the inactivation rate of TiON/PdO may not decay rapidly to a plateau in
TiON/PdO photocatalytic fibers can be synthesized by adding PdO nanoparticles on nitrogen-doped titanium oxide surface. The TiON/PdO fibers may demonstrate high disinfection efficiency on E. coli bacteria under visible light illumination, and most strikingly a post-illumination catalytic disinfection capability after the visible light is shut off. Such a unique combination of strong photocatalytic disinfection with persistent post-illumination catalytic disinfection properties come from the electron transfer in and out of PdO nanoparticles during and after visible light illumination of nitrogen-doped titanium oxide. It is believed that such charge transfers may also occur for other transition metal oxide nanoparticles dispersed on anion-doped n-TiO2 photocatalyst systems. The resulting combination of photocatalytic and post-illumination catalytic properties makes these materials suited for solar-based systems in a broad range of environmental applications.
Wild type Escherichia coli AN 387 (ATCC 15597, the American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, Va., U.S.A.) can be used for photocatalytic inactivation experiment. After overnight culture, the cells can be diluted to a cell suspension (ca. 107 cfu/ml) in buffer solution (0.05 M KH2PO4 and 0.05 M K2HPO4, pH 7.0) prior to the use for photocatalytic inactivation. All solid or liquid materials can be autoclaved for 30 min at 121° C. before use. For E. coli disinfection under visible light illumination, a metal halogen desk lamp can be used, which has a glass filter to provide zero light intensity below 400 nm. The light intensity striking the cell suspensions can be at ca. 1.0 mW/cm2, as measured by a Multi-Sense MS-100 optical Radiometer (UVP, Inc., Upland, Calif., U.S.A.). For E. coli disinfection under dark environment, photocatalytic fiber samples can first be illuminated by the same lamp for ˜10 h to simulate the day-time illumination, then the lamp can be shut off and fiber samples used to conduct disinfection experiment in dark over fresh E. coli cell suspension (ca. 107 cfu/ml). At the starting time, aliquot of 3-mL E. coli cell suspension may be pipetted onto a sterile 60×15 mm petri dish with photocatalytic fiber sample placed in the bottom. A fixed concentration of ˜1 mg photocatalyst/mL E. coli solution can be used in this study. At regular time intervals, 20 μL of aliquots of the TiON/PdO-treated cell suspensions may be withdrawn in sequence. After appropriate dilutions in buffer solution, aliquots of 20 μL together with 2.5 mL top agar may be spread onto an agar medium plate and incubated at 37° C. for 18 h. The number of viable cells in terms of colony-forming units may be counted. Analyses may be performed in duplicate with control runs carried out each time under the same experiment conditions, but without any photocatalytic materials.
Methylene blue may be used for static interaction experiment with TiON/PdO fiber samples in the dark. Two TiON/PdO samples may first be kept in dark for 24 h. One sample can then be illuminated by the same lamp for ˜10 h to simulate the day-time visible light illumination condition, while the other sample can still be kept in dark. The fiber sample may be placed at the bottom of 45×10 mm petri dishes, and 2 ppm MB solution may be added into the petri dish at a fixed concentration of 0.5 mg photocatalyst/mL solution. The covered petri dish can be kept in dark during the treatment process. The treatment time can vary from 10 min to 3 h. After the treatment, the light absorption of the clear solution can be measured by a Cary 500 UV/Vis/NIR spectrophotometer. The remaining percentage of MB in the solution can be calculated by the ratio between the light absorptions of TiON/PdO treated and -untreated MB solutions.
Spin trapping electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) measurements can be conducted to verify the formation of reactive radicals by TiON/PdO photocatalytic powders both under visible light illumination and in the dark. Two spin trapping chemicals can be used in this study, including 5,5-Dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO, 97%, Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A.) and α-(4-Pyridyl N-oxide)-N-tert-butylnitrone (POBN, 99%, Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A.). DMPO may first be decolorized by active carbon and then filtered with millipore filter to get rid of impurities before the use. Before the measurements with TiON/PdO, a Fenton reaction can first be conducted as comparison and as proof of the correct instrumentation. TiON/PdO powders can be put into petri dishes and dispersed in double deionized water before adding electron trapping chemicals. DMPO can be prepared as a 100 mM stock solution and the final concentration of DMPO within the TiON/PdO dispersion can be 50 mM. 100 mM POBN and 95% ethanol stock solution can be added into the TiON/PdO dispersion to reach a final concentration of POBN at 10 mM and ethanol at 170 mM. EPR spectra can be collected on a Eline Century Series EPR Spectrometer (Varian E-109-12, Varian, Inc., Palo Alto, Calif., U.S.A.) working in the X-band mode at 9.51 GHz, center field 3390 G, and 10.00 dB power.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/091,314 entitled “Photocatalysts and Photocatalytic Methods”, which was filed Aug. 22, 2008, the entirety of which is incorporated by reference herein.
This invention was made with Government support by the Center of Advanced Materials for the Purification of Water with Systems, National Science Foundation, under Agreement Number CTS-0120978; Grant Number DEFG02-91-ER45439 awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US09/54785 | 8/24/2009 | WO | 00 | 2/22/2011 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61091314 | Aug 2008 | US |