Microwave-assisted degradation of acid orange using a conjugated polymer, polyaniline, as catalyst

Microwave-assisted photocatalytic degradation of dyes is one of the emerging technologies for waste water remediation. Microwave effectively accelerates photocatalytic degradation, when microwave electrodeless lamp (MEL) substitutes traditional UV lamp as light source. This setup can be extremely si...

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Main Authors: Ufana Riaz, S.M. Ashraf, Mohd. Aqib
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014-01-01
Series:Arabian Journal of Chemistry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1878535213002013
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spelling doaj-071832ad46364ee69b6ea25483c051712020-11-24T21:57:47ZengElsevierArabian Journal of Chemistry1878-53522014-01-0171798610.1016/j.arabjc.2013.07.001Microwave-assisted degradation of acid orange using a conjugated polymer, polyaniline, as catalystUfana RiazS.M. AshrafMohd. AqibMicrowave-assisted photocatalytic degradation of dyes is one of the emerging technologies for waste water remediation. Microwave effectively accelerates photocatalytic degradation, when microwave electrodeless lamp (MEL) substitutes traditional UV lamp as light source. This setup can be extremely simplified if MEL and photocatalyst can be replaced by a catalyst which can work under microwave irradiation in the absence of any light source. The present work reports for the first time degradation of acid orange 7 (AO) under microwave irradiation using polyaniline (PANI) as catalyst in the absence of any UV lamp as light source. The degradation/decolourization was carried out in neutral acidic and basic media and was monitored spectrophotometrically to evaluate the ability of microwave irradiation to degrade AO. Microwave irradiation showed excellent performance as it completely decolourizes AO dye solution in 10 min. With the advantages of low cost and rapid processing, this novel catalyst is expected to gain promising application in the treatment of various dyestuff wastewaters on a large scale.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1878535213002013CatalystsDegradationDyes/pigmentsNanostructured polymersMicrowave irradiation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ufana Riaz
S.M. Ashraf
Mohd. Aqib
spellingShingle Ufana Riaz
S.M. Ashraf
Mohd. Aqib
Microwave-assisted degradation of acid orange using a conjugated polymer, polyaniline, as catalyst
Arabian Journal of Chemistry
Catalysts
Degradation
Dyes/pigments
Nanostructured polymers
Microwave irradiation
author_facet Ufana Riaz
S.M. Ashraf
Mohd. Aqib
author_sort Ufana Riaz
title Microwave-assisted degradation of acid orange using a conjugated polymer, polyaniline, as catalyst
title_short Microwave-assisted degradation of acid orange using a conjugated polymer, polyaniline, as catalyst
title_full Microwave-assisted degradation of acid orange using a conjugated polymer, polyaniline, as catalyst
title_fullStr Microwave-assisted degradation of acid orange using a conjugated polymer, polyaniline, as catalyst
title_full_unstemmed Microwave-assisted degradation of acid orange using a conjugated polymer, polyaniline, as catalyst
title_sort microwave-assisted degradation of acid orange using a conjugated polymer, polyaniline, as catalyst
publisher Elsevier
series Arabian Journal of Chemistry
issn 1878-5352
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Microwave-assisted photocatalytic degradation of dyes is one of the emerging technologies for waste water remediation. Microwave effectively accelerates photocatalytic degradation, when microwave electrodeless lamp (MEL) substitutes traditional UV lamp as light source. This setup can be extremely simplified if MEL and photocatalyst can be replaced by a catalyst which can work under microwave irradiation in the absence of any light source. The present work reports for the first time degradation of acid orange 7 (AO) under microwave irradiation using polyaniline (PANI) as catalyst in the absence of any UV lamp as light source. The degradation/decolourization was carried out in neutral acidic and basic media and was monitored spectrophotometrically to evaluate the ability of microwave irradiation to degrade AO. Microwave irradiation showed excellent performance as it completely decolourizes AO dye solution in 10 min. With the advantages of low cost and rapid processing, this novel catalyst is expected to gain promising application in the treatment of various dyestuff wastewaters on a large scale.
topic Catalysts
Degradation
Dyes/pigments
Nanostructured polymers
Microwave irradiation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1878535213002013
work_keys_str_mv AT ufanariaz microwaveassisteddegradationofacidorangeusingaconjugatedpolymerpolyanilineascatalyst
AT smashraf microwaveassisteddegradationofacidorangeusingaconjugatedpolymerpolyanilineascatalyst
AT mohdaqib microwaveassisteddegradationofacidorangeusingaconjugatedpolymerpolyanilineascatalyst
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