Fabrication and Characterization of TiO2-PMMA Composite Fibers for Photocatalytic Environmental Remediation

abstract: Photocatalytic activity of titanium dioxide (titania or TiO2) offers enormous potential in solving energy and environmental problems. Immobilization of titania nanoparticles on inert substrates is an effective way of utilizing its photocatalytic activity since nanoparticles enable high mas...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Kanth, Namrata (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57294
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-57294
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-572942020-06-02T03:01:24Z Fabrication and Characterization of TiO2-PMMA Composite Fibers for Photocatalytic Environmental Remediation abstract: Photocatalytic activity of titanium dioxide (titania or TiO2) offers enormous potential in solving energy and environmental problems. Immobilization of titania nanoparticles on inert substrates is an effective way of utilizing its photocatalytic activity since nanoparticles enable high mass-transport, and immobilization avoids post-treatment separation. For competitive photocatalytic performance, the morphology of the substrate can be engineered to enhance mass-transport and light accessibility. In this work, two types of fiber architectures (i.e., dispersed polymer/titania phase or D-phase, and multi-phase polymer-core/composite-shell fibers or M-phase) were explored as effective substrate solutions for anchoring titania. These fibers were fabricated using a low-cost and scalable fiber spinning technique. Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) was selected as the substrate material due to its ultraviolet (UV) transparency and stability against oxidative radicals. The work systematically investigates the influence of the fiber porosity on mass-transport and UV light scattering. The properties of the fabricated fiber systems were characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET), UV-vis spectrophotometry (UV-vis), and mechanical analysis. The photocatalytic performance was characterized by monitoring the decomposition of methylene blue (MB) under UV (i.e., 365 nm) light. Fabrication of photocatalytic support structures was observed to be an optimization problem where porosity improved mass transport but reduced UV accessibility. The D-phase fibers demonstrated the highest MB degradation rate (i.e., 0.116 min-1) due to high porosity (i.e., 33.2 m2/g). The M-phase fibers reported a better degradation rate compared to a D-phase fibers due to higher UV accessibility efficiency. Dissertation/Thesis Kanth, Namrata (Author) Song, Kenan (Advisor) Tongay, Sefaattin (Advisor) Kannan, Arunachala Mada (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Materials Science Engineering eng 68 pages Masters Thesis Materials Science and Engineering 2020 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57294 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Materials Science
Engineering
spellingShingle Materials Science
Engineering
Fabrication and Characterization of TiO2-PMMA Composite Fibers for Photocatalytic Environmental Remediation
description abstract: Photocatalytic activity of titanium dioxide (titania or TiO2) offers enormous potential in solving energy and environmental problems. Immobilization of titania nanoparticles on inert substrates is an effective way of utilizing its photocatalytic activity since nanoparticles enable high mass-transport, and immobilization avoids post-treatment separation. For competitive photocatalytic performance, the morphology of the substrate can be engineered to enhance mass-transport and light accessibility. In this work, two types of fiber architectures (i.e., dispersed polymer/titania phase or D-phase, and multi-phase polymer-core/composite-shell fibers or M-phase) were explored as effective substrate solutions for anchoring titania. These fibers were fabricated using a low-cost and scalable fiber spinning technique. Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) was selected as the substrate material due to its ultraviolet (UV) transparency and stability against oxidative radicals. The work systematically investigates the influence of the fiber porosity on mass-transport and UV light scattering. The properties of the fabricated fiber systems were characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET), UV-vis spectrophotometry (UV-vis), and mechanical analysis. The photocatalytic performance was characterized by monitoring the decomposition of methylene blue (MB) under UV (i.e., 365 nm) light. Fabrication of photocatalytic support structures was observed to be an optimization problem where porosity improved mass transport but reduced UV accessibility. The D-phase fibers demonstrated the highest MB degradation rate (i.e., 0.116 min-1) due to high porosity (i.e., 33.2 m2/g). The M-phase fibers reported a better degradation rate compared to a D-phase fibers due to higher UV accessibility efficiency. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Materials Science and Engineering 2020
author2 Kanth, Namrata (Author)
author_facet Kanth, Namrata (Author)
title Fabrication and Characterization of TiO2-PMMA Composite Fibers for Photocatalytic Environmental Remediation
title_short Fabrication and Characterization of TiO2-PMMA Composite Fibers for Photocatalytic Environmental Remediation
title_full Fabrication and Characterization of TiO2-PMMA Composite Fibers for Photocatalytic Environmental Remediation
title_fullStr Fabrication and Characterization of TiO2-PMMA Composite Fibers for Photocatalytic Environmental Remediation
title_full_unstemmed Fabrication and Characterization of TiO2-PMMA Composite Fibers for Photocatalytic Environmental Remediation
title_sort fabrication and characterization of tio2-pmma composite fibers for photocatalytic environmental remediation
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57294
_version_ 1719315823262171136