Engineering iron oxide nanocatalysts by a microwave-assisted polyol method for the magnetically induced degradation of organic pollutants


Abstract:

Advanced oxidation processes constitute a promising alternative for the treatment of wastewater containing organic pollutants. Still, the lack of cost-effective processes has hampered the widespread use of these methodologies. Iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles stand as a great alternative since they can be engineered by different reproducible and scalable methods. The present study consists of the synthesis of single-core and multicore magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles by the microwave-assisted polyol method and their use as self-heating catalysts for the degradation of an anionic (acid orange 8) and a cationic dye (methylene blue). Decolorization of these dyes was successfully improved by subjecting the catalyst to an alternating magnetic field (AMF, 16 kA/m, 200 kHz). The sudden temperature increase at the surface of the catalyst led to an intensification of 10% in the decolorization yields using 1 g/L of catalyst, 0.3 M H2O2 and 500 ppm of dye. Full decolorization was achieved at 90◦C, but iron leaching (40 ppm) was detected at this temperature leading to a homogeneous Fenton process. Multicore nanoparticles showed higher degradation rates and 100% efficiencies in four reusability cycles under the AMF. The improvement of this process with AMF is a step forward into more sustainable remediation techniques.

Año de publicación:

2021

Keywords:

  • organic dyes
  • microwave synthesis
  • Iron oxide nanoparticles
  • Magnetic induction heating
  • Adsorption
  • Advanced oxidation process
  • wastewater
  • Acid orange 8
  • Methylene blue

Fuente:

scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso abierto

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Ciencia ambiental
  • Nanopartícula
  • Contaminación

Áreas temáticas:

  • Ingeniería y operaciones afines
  • Tecnología de otros productos orgánicos
  • Química física