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1.
Small ; 20(5): e2305316, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37661568

ABSTRACT

Hierarchically porous carbons with tailor-made properties are essential for applications wherein rich active sites and fast mass transfer are required. Herein, a rapid aerosol-confined salt/surfactant templating approach is proposed for synthesizing hierarchically porous carbon microspheres (HPCMs) with a maze-like structure and large mesopore tunnels for high-performance tri-phase catalytic ozonation. The confined assembly in drying microdroplets is crucial for coherent salt (NaCl) and surfactant (F127) dual templating without macroscopic phase separation. The HPCMs possess tunable sizes, a maze-like structure with highly open macropores (0.3-30 µm) templated from NaCl crystal arrays, large intrawall mesopore tunnels (10-45 nm) templated from F127, and rich micropores (surface area >1000 m2 g-1 ) and oxygen heteroatoms originated from NaCl-confined carbonization of phenolic resin. The structure formation mechanism of the HPCMs and several influencing factors on properties are elaborated. The HPCMs exhibit superior performance in gas-liquid-solid tri-phase catalytic ozonation for oxalate degradation, owing to their hierarchical pore structure for fast mass transfer and rich defects and oxygen-containing groups (especially carbonyl) for efficient O3 activation. The reactive oxygen species responsible for oxalate degradation and the influences of several structure parameters on performance are discussed. This work may provide a platform for producing hierarchically porous materials for various applications.

2.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 622: 62-74, 2022 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35489102

ABSTRACT

Semiconductor supported iron oxides are highly promising catalysts to remove organic pollutants in photo-Fenton. Development of robust composite catalysts with both high activity and stability is essential. In this work, amorphous iron oxide layers are uniformly and tightly anchored on two-dimensional (2D) BiOCl nanoplates through post precipitation-deposition and subsequent low-temperature thermal treatment at 150-350 °C. A low iron loading amount (1-2 wt.%) is sufficient to make the resulted composite (BiOCl-Fe) catalysts superior in photo-Fenton oxidation of phenol (10 mg/L) with high mineralization efficiency (up to about 80% in 60 min). The low-temperature thermal treatment can significantly enhance the stability of catalysts with much less iron leached and high photo-Fenton performance maintained. The intimate contact between the amorphous iron oxide layers and the 2D BiOCl nanoplates could guarantee the fluent electron transfer and efficient activation of H2O2 at interfaces. Compared with the pristine BiOCl, the BiOCl-Fe catalysts possess faster separation of the charge carriers. The predominant active species turns from O2•- in photocatalysis to HO• in the photo-Fenton catalysis. This research could provide enhanced understanding on the synthesis of robust catalysts and the structure optimization of BiOCl supported iron oxides for photo-Fenton.

3.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 581(Pt B): 964-978, 2021 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32956914

ABSTRACT

Supported copper oxides with well-dispersed metal species, small size, tunable valence and high stability are highly desirable in catalysis. Herein, novel copper oxide (CuOx) catalysts supported on defect-rich mesoporous alumina microspheres are developed using a spray-drying-assisted evaporation induced self-assembly method. The catalysts possess a special structure composed of a mesoporous outer layer, a mesoporous-nanosphere-stacked under layer and a hollow cavity. Because of this special structure and the defective nature of the alumina support, the CuOx catalysts are ultrasmall in size (1 ~ 3 nm), bivalent with a very high Cu+/Cu2+ ratio (0.7), and highly stable against sintering and oxidation at high temperatures (up to 800 °C), while the wet impregnation method results in CuOx catalysts with much larger sizes (~15 nm) and lower the Cu+/Cu2+ ratios (~0.29). The catalyst formation mechanism through the spray drying method is proposed and discussed. The catalysts show remarkable performance in catalytic ozonation of phenol wastewaters. With high-concentration phenol (250 ppm) as the model organic pollutant, the optimized catalyst delivers promising catalytic performance with 100% phenol removal and 53% TOC removal in 60 min, and a high cyclic stability. Superoxide anion free radicals (⋅O2-), singlet oxygen (1O2) and hydroxyl radicals (⋅OH) are the predominant reactive species. A detailed structure-performance study reveals the surface hydroxyl groups and Cu+/Cu2+ redox couples play cooperatively to accelerate O3 decomposition generating reactive radicals. The plausible catalytic O3 decomposition mechanism is proposed and discussed with supportive evidences.

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