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Hierarchical optofluidic microreactor for water purification using an array of TiO2 nanostructures

npj Clean Water 2022 23 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Hyejeong Kim, Hyunah Kwon, Ryungeun Song, Seonghun Shin, So‐Young Ham, Hee‐Deung Park, Jinkee Lee, Peer Fischer, Eberhard Bodenschatz

Summary

Researchers developed a hierarchical optofluidic microreactor combining nanostructured TiO2 photocatalysts with light-harvesting substrates and herringbone micromixers, dramatically increasing the efficiency of photocatalytic water purification.

Polymers

Abstract Clean water for human consumption is, in many places, a scarce resource, and efficient schemes to purify water are in great demand. Here, we describe a method to dramatically increase the efficiency of a photocatalytic water purification microreactor. Our hierarchical optofluidic microreactor combines the advantages of a nanostructured photocatalyst with light harvesting by base substrates, together with a herringbone micromixer for the enhanced transport of reactants. The herringbone micromixer further improves the reaction efficiency of the nanostructured photocatalyst by generating counter-rotating vortices along the flow direction. In addition, the use of metal-based substrates underneath the nanostructured catalyst increases the purification capacity by improving the light-harvesting efficiency. The photocatalyst is grown from TiO 2 as a nanohelix film, which exhibits a large surface-to-volume ratio and a reactive microstructure. We show that the hierarchical structuring with micro- to nanoscale features results in a device with markedly increased photocatalytic activity as compared with a solid unstructured catalyst surface. This is evidenced by the successful degradation of persistent aqueous contaminants, sulfamethoxazole, and polystyrene microplastics. The design can potentially be implemented with solar photocatalysts in flow-through water purification systems.

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