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Water purification of organic pollutants using photocatalytic microreactors integrating Au/TiO₂/carbon cloth under solar irradiation

Chemical Engineering Journal Advances 2025 Score: 38 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Eunseok Seo, Ji Won Park, Jiwon Park, Min Cho, Heeyeop Chae, Han-Bok Seo, Yongsung Bang, Sungwoo Hue, Jaewon Choi, Cong Wang, Seung-Yop Lee, Jungyul Park

Summary

Researchers developed a gold nanoparticle-decorated TiO2 carbon cloth photoelectrochemical microreactor that removed 89% of microcystin-LR in 12.9 minutes under solar irradiation, leveraging localised surface plasmon resonance and microfluidic confinement to enhance photocatalytic efficiency for water purification.

Study Type Environmental

• An Au/TiO₂/CC PEC microreactor integrates nonlinear fields, LSPR, and microfluidics. • Plasmonic Au NPs enhance visible-light absorption and photothermal activation. • This synergy improves charge separation, ion transport, and photocatalytic efficiency. • The Au/TiO₂/CC system removed 89 % MC-LR in 12.9 min and detoxified cyanobacteria. • Modular, solar-driven design enables scalable and sustainable water purification. Water pollution from organic contaminants, microplastics, and cyanotoxins necessitates the development of high-efficiency and scalable purification technologies. However, conventional TiO₂-based photocatalytic systems suffer from low visible-light absorption, rapid charge recombination, and limited mass transport, reducing their practical efficiency. This study presents a novel photoelectrocatalytic (PEC) microreactor integrating Au/TiO₂ nanofibers (NFs) on carbon cloth (CC) to enhance pollutant degradation through localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR), nonlinear electric fields, and microfluidic transport phenomena. The proposed system achieved 89 % microcystin-LR (MC-LR) degradation in 12.9 min, a reaction rate constant of 10.3 h⁻¹, which is 3 to 100 × higher than conventional TiO₂-based systems. In particular, orbitrap mass spectrometry analysis of the samples after the cyanobacterial degradation experiment confirmed that the toxic compound MC-LR was markedly removed under 1 Sun + 3 V conditions for 5 h, and that the intermediate degradation products of MC-LR were also significantly reduced compared to the control. These enhancements stem from efficient visible-light absorbance, accelerates charge separation, and promotes ion and reactant transport. The scalable modular design enables practical deployment, as validated by outdoor experiments under natural sunlight. This work introduces a high-performance PEC microreactor platform with significant potential for large-scale sustainable wastewater treatment.

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