Abstract

Hybrid non-thermal plasma combined with photocatalysis is an efficient technology for the degradation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and leads to a synergetic boosting effect of the degradation process. Herein, the degradation of ethylbenzene (EB) in a hybrid lab-scale reactor was performed. In the combined mode (plasma DBD and photocatalysis [TiO2 + UVA]), the degradation of EB was synergetically boosted, and a higher degradation efficiency was reached. In this study, the behavior of the synergetic effect was investigated whilst varying several operational conditions, including the UV light source (UVA and UVC), the TiO2 weight (7.5–22.51 g·m-²), the addition of metallic dopants to the TiO2 at different weight ratios (x%Cu-TiO2 and x%MnO2-TiO2, where x = 1, 3, 5 and 10 for the weight ratios of Cu:TiO2 and MnO2:TiO2) and the catalyst support (glass fiber tissue [GFT] and nickel foam [NF] with different thicknesses [0.3–3.3 mm]). Moreover, the oxygen content (0–100%) in the reactor atmosphere was examined. The results showed an enhancement of the synergetic effect under UVC (TiO2 + UVC + DBD), which may be a consequence of intensive ozone decomposition under UVC and the generation of reactive atomic oxygen. The improvement of the synergetic effect under 1% Cu-TiO2 and 10% MnO2-TiO2 catalysts is assumed to reflect the role of metallic species in the production of oxygen species on the TiO2 surface via the ozone depletion mechanism. Furthermore, TiO2/NF (3.3 mm) showed the highest synergetic effect, likely due to the conductive character and the 3D porous structure of NF. Finally, the rich oxygen composition had an apparent impact on the synergetic effect.

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