Development of Novel Photocatalytic Reactor for Dye Wastewater Treatment
Date
2020
Authors
Das, Suman
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Over the years, industrial development has increased, causing a rapid increase in all form
of pollution. A large amount of organic waste released into the freshwater bodies have
increased water pollution several folds. In this regard, an effective environmentally friendly
process for wastewater treatment is urgently needed, because sometimes it is difficult to
degrade different toxic pollutants efficiently by conventional methods. Photocatalytic
nanoparticles are an excellent choice for the mineralization of organic pollutants present in
wastewater. The use of the photocatalyst nanoparticle into a reactor is also challenging
since a light source is compulsory to activate the catalysts.
In this work, TiO2, rGO, g-C3N4 and TiO2/rGO/g-C3N4 mixture in two forms: an admixture
and chemically synthesized composite photocatalysts were immobilized in polystyrene
films and employed as a photocatalytic film. The characterizations were done using SEMEDX, FTIR, XPS, XRD, ICP-OES, BET-Surface area analyzer, particle size analyzer,
band-gap analyzer, etc. Initially, the photocatalytic performance of the prepared TiO2
polystyrene film was checked followed by (TiO2, rGO, and g-C3N4)-admixture and then
TiO2/rGO/g-C3N4-chemical composite. The photocatalytic oxidation of synthetic dye
wastewater (Remazol Turquoise Blue) under ultra-violet and sunlight irradiation was
carried out in different types of photocatalytic reactors (batch, scaled-up a batch with
recirculation, and multiphase reactors). The reactor volume was varied from 200 to 2900
mL, and the degradation of Remazol Turquoise Blue was confirmed by TOC and HPLC
analysis. The optimization of photocatalytic reaction parameters (effect of catalyst
loadings, pH, initial dye concentration, light source, polystyrene photocatalytic film
thickness, recyclability the film, oxidizing agents, etc), as well as the reactor parameters
(recirculation rate, air flow rate, diameter ratio, etc), were investigated in detail
systematically. The synergistic effect of the photocatalysts was also analyzed by using the
admixture of the photocatalysts, which showed a great significance in this work.
The photocatalytic treatment of RTB dye under optimized conditions shows that there was
more than 90% decolorization in most of the reactors after 90 min of irradiation. Amongii
various reactors used in this study, the multiphase photocatalytic reactor has unique way
to utilize the photocatalyst, which makes it novel and efficient. Also, the multiphase reactor
showed the best performance since the observed decolourization and degradation were
almost same. To make this study cost-efficient and suitable for large scale application,
waste polystyrene was used as a substrate material instead of pristine polystyrene.
This work presents a simple, easy, economical, and eco-friendly way to deal with the toxic
organic pollutants. The photocatalytic reactors used in this work are highly efficient and
can be easily scaled up for the industrial-scale application and employed for any other
organic pollutant present in the water.
Description
Keywords
Department of Chemical Engineering, Photocatalyst, Immobilization, Polystyrene, Remazol Turquoise Blue, Multiphase photocatalytic reactor, Degradation