4.7 Article

Improved direct synthesis of TiO2 catalyst using sonication and its application for the desulfurization of thiophene

Journal

ULTRASONICS SONOCHEMISTRY
Volume 73, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ultsonch.2021.105547

Keywords

Catalyst synthesis; Ultrasound; Characterization; Desulfurization; Combination approaches

Funding

  1. Institute of Chemical Technology

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TiO2 catalyst was synthesized under ultrasonic irradiation to achieve smaller particle size and higher sphericity and homogeneity compared to conventionally synthesized TiO2. The catalytic activity for desulfurization of thiophene was significantly improved with ultrasound synthesized catalyst, showing the best performance with US/UV/H2O2/TiO2 approach and complete desulfurization in n-hexane and n-octane.
TiO2 catalyst was synthesized in the presence of ultrasound (ultrasonic horn at 20 kHz frequency and 70% duty cycle) at different power (80 W to 120 W) and durations as well as surfactant concentration with an objective of establishing best conditions for achieving lowest particle size of the photocatalyst. Detailed characterization in terms of crystal phase, crystallinity, functional groups and morphology of the photocatalyst has been performed using SEM, XRD and FTIR analysis. It was demonstrated that sonication significantly reduced the particle size with high degree of sphericity and homogeneity as compared to conventionally synthesized TiO2 with similar crystallinity in both cases. The catalytic performance was subsequently evaluated for the deep desulfurization of thiophene. Different desulfurization approaches including individual US (ultrasonic horn at 20 kHz frequency, 110 W power and 70% duty cycle) and UV irradiations, US/UV, US/UV/H2O2, US/UV/TiO2 and US/UV/H2O2/ TiO2 were applied to evaluate the catalytic activity. The best approach was demonstrated as US/UV/H2O2/TiO2 and also activity of catalyst synthesized using ultrasound was much better compared to conventionally synthesized catalyst. The studies related to different model solvents demonstrated lowest reactivity for toluene whereas n-hexane and n-octane resulted in complete desulfurization in 60 min and 50 min treatment respectively. The desulfurization followed pseudo first order reaction kinetics irrespective of the solvent used. Overall the work clearly demonstrated the efficacy of ultrasound in improving the catalyst synthesis as well as desulfurization of thiophene.

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