Niobium-Titanium-Based Photocatalysts: Its Potentials for Free Cyanide Oxidation in Residual Aqueous Effluent

Organic compounds are employed as additives to increase the dissolution speed of gold, in concentrations around 1 g/L when using cyanidation, thereby forming a residual aqueous effluent with high amounts of free cyanides and organic compounds, which generate metallic complexes difficult to degrade....

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Main Authors: Aida Liliana Barbosa López, Isel M. Castro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Chemistry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fchem.2020.00099/full
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spelling doaj-187d689e69a64f72a7fb8300ebc04ac12020-11-25T02:06:32ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Chemistry2296-26462020-03-01810.3389/fchem.2020.00099499621Niobium-Titanium-Based Photocatalysts: Its Potentials for Free Cyanide Oxidation in Residual Aqueous EffluentAida Liliana Barbosa LópezIsel M. CastroOrganic compounds are employed as additives to increase the dissolution speed of gold, in concentrations around 1 g/L when using cyanidation, thereby forming a residual aqueous effluent with high amounts of free cyanides and organic compounds, which generate metallic complexes difficult to degrade. To increase the photodegradation efficiency, promising niobium and titanium porous materials are proposed as photocatalysts, due to their role in simultaneous oxidation and reduction reactions. In the process of cyanide oxidation, NbO5 0.3H2O was doped with titanium oxalate (IV) of 0.5, 1, and 1.5%; and HTiNbO5 were synthesized, from the mixture of NbO5 with TiO2 Degussa-P25, by coprecipitation, impregnation, and solid state. The determination of its elemental composition, morphological and textural properties were carried out by using various XRD techniques, Raman spectroscopy, SEM/EDS and acidity by pyridine. The experiments of photocatalytic oxidation of cyanide used one semibatch reactor with ultraviolet irradiation 125 W in a pH range of 9.5–12. The catalyst with the highest percentage of degradation was HTiNbO5 93.7%, which is attributed to the microstructure of the double layer and Lewis acidity sites, followed by NbTi-1% 92.9% and the Nb2O5.3H2O 82.4%, being the majority product cyanate, proposing its mechanism of reaction. Characterization experiments indicated Nb-O-Ti bridges that have been associated with the control of redox properties of the niobium species and Ti-O-Nb = O, which could be generating a greater number of e–H +pairs, increasing the photocatalytic activity. It is considered that the method of synthesis has a strong influence in changing the morphology of the particles such as porosity, specific surface and factors such as the acidity of niobium–based catalysts, which are important to achieving efficiency in degradation. Niobium-Titanium photocatalysts proved to be an excellent new breakthrough in Advanced Oxidation Technologies (AOT), to eliminate cyanide in wastewater from mining activities.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fchem.2020.00099/fullmining activitiescyanateultraviolet irradiationniobium oxidesLewis aciditysolid state
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aida Liliana Barbosa López
Isel M. Castro
spellingShingle Aida Liliana Barbosa López
Isel M. Castro
Niobium-Titanium-Based Photocatalysts: Its Potentials for Free Cyanide Oxidation in Residual Aqueous Effluent
Frontiers in Chemistry
mining activities
cyanate
ultraviolet irradiation
niobium oxides
Lewis acidity
solid state
author_facet Aida Liliana Barbosa López
Isel M. Castro
author_sort Aida Liliana Barbosa López
title Niobium-Titanium-Based Photocatalysts: Its Potentials for Free Cyanide Oxidation in Residual Aqueous Effluent
title_short Niobium-Titanium-Based Photocatalysts: Its Potentials for Free Cyanide Oxidation in Residual Aqueous Effluent
title_full Niobium-Titanium-Based Photocatalysts: Its Potentials for Free Cyanide Oxidation in Residual Aqueous Effluent
title_fullStr Niobium-Titanium-Based Photocatalysts: Its Potentials for Free Cyanide Oxidation in Residual Aqueous Effluent
title_full_unstemmed Niobium-Titanium-Based Photocatalysts: Its Potentials for Free Cyanide Oxidation in Residual Aqueous Effluent
title_sort niobium-titanium-based photocatalysts: its potentials for free cyanide oxidation in residual aqueous effluent
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Chemistry
issn 2296-2646
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Organic compounds are employed as additives to increase the dissolution speed of gold, in concentrations around 1 g/L when using cyanidation, thereby forming a residual aqueous effluent with high amounts of free cyanides and organic compounds, which generate metallic complexes difficult to degrade. To increase the photodegradation efficiency, promising niobium and titanium porous materials are proposed as photocatalysts, due to their role in simultaneous oxidation and reduction reactions. In the process of cyanide oxidation, NbO5 0.3H2O was doped with titanium oxalate (IV) of 0.5, 1, and 1.5%; and HTiNbO5 were synthesized, from the mixture of NbO5 with TiO2 Degussa-P25, by coprecipitation, impregnation, and solid state. The determination of its elemental composition, morphological and textural properties were carried out by using various XRD techniques, Raman spectroscopy, SEM/EDS and acidity by pyridine. The experiments of photocatalytic oxidation of cyanide used one semibatch reactor with ultraviolet irradiation 125 W in a pH range of 9.5–12. The catalyst with the highest percentage of degradation was HTiNbO5 93.7%, which is attributed to the microstructure of the double layer and Lewis acidity sites, followed by NbTi-1% 92.9% and the Nb2O5.3H2O 82.4%, being the majority product cyanate, proposing its mechanism of reaction. Characterization experiments indicated Nb-O-Ti bridges that have been associated with the control of redox properties of the niobium species and Ti-O-Nb = O, which could be generating a greater number of e–H +pairs, increasing the photocatalytic activity. It is considered that the method of synthesis has a strong influence in changing the morphology of the particles such as porosity, specific surface and factors such as the acidity of niobium–based catalysts, which are important to achieving efficiency in degradation. Niobium-Titanium photocatalysts proved to be an excellent new breakthrough in Advanced Oxidation Technologies (AOT), to eliminate cyanide in wastewater from mining activities.
topic mining activities
cyanate
ultraviolet irradiation
niobium oxides
Lewis acidity
solid state
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fchem.2020.00099/full
work_keys_str_mv AT aidalilianabarbosalopez niobiumtitaniumbasedphotocatalystsitspotentialsforfreecyanideoxidationinresidualaqueouseffluent
AT iselmcastro niobiumtitaniumbasedphotocatalystsitspotentialsforfreecyanideoxidationinresidualaqueouseffluent
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