Abstract

Under ambient humid conditions, the adsorption of acetaldehyde on unmodified TiO2 is small and weak. In contrast, loading Au particles smaller than 3nm on TiO2 with surface area larger than 17.5m2g−1 (Au/TiO2) causes the rapid and strong adsorption of gaseous acetaldehyde from a closed space. This striking adsorption phenomenon initiates from the aerobic oxidation of acetaldehyde to acetic acid by the thermocatalysis of Au/TiO2 at room temperature. Acetic acid is moved to the TiO2 surface to be dissociated to acetate ion and proton, which are adsorbed on the Lewis acid and base sites on the surface, respectively. The resulting reproduction of the catalytic sites for the acetaldehyde oxidation enables the continuous removal of acetaldehyde without the release of the harmful product. Further, the adsorbed species on Au/TiO2 are completely oxidized to CO2 by the post-heating at 548K, whereas the oxidation degree of acetate adsorbed on unmodified TiO2 remains several % even at 570K with harmful products (Quah et al., 2010).

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