Abstract

Nanopillars-TiO2 was immobilized onto a borosilicate glass disk using sol–gel template method. The TiO2 film was immobilized with and without polyethylene glycol as filler media and annealed at 500°C. The prepared films were characterized by the IR, XRD, XRF and XPS analytical methods. The surface morphology was obtained using FE-SEM and AFM images of these thin films and the BET specific surface area was obtained. Further, the Nanopillars TiO2 was employed in the photocatalytic degradation of micro-pollutants viz., diclofenac sodium and tetracycline hydrochloride from aqueous solutions using UV-light under batch reactor operations. Various physico-chemical parametric studies viz., effect of pH, pollutant concentration and interfering ions was studied to deduce the mechanism involved in photocatalytic degradation of these pollutants. The time dependence degradation of these pollutants provided kinetics of degradation of these pollutants from aqueous solutions. The studies were further extended with total organic carbon measurement using TOC analyser to demonstrate an apparent mineralization of these pollutants. The photocatalytic degradation was assessed in presence of scavengers and several co-existing ions to simulate the data for real wastewater matrix. The hydroxyl radical scavengers 2-propanol and sodium bicarbonate greatly suppressed the catalytic activity of the thin films. However, the singlet oxygen scavenger sodium azide could not affect significantly the catalytic activity of these thin films at least the degradation of diclofenac sodium and tetracycline from aqueous solutions.

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