The photocatalytic degradation of two commercial textile azo dyes, namely C.I Reactive Black 5 and C.I Reactive Red 239, has been studied. TiO2 P25 Degussa was used as catalyst and photodegradation was carried out in aqueous solution under artificial irradiation with a 125 W mercury vapor lamp. The effects of the amount of TiO2 used, UV-light irradiation time, pH of the solution under treatment, initial concentration of the azo dye and addition of different concentrations of hydrogen peroxide were investigated. The effect of the simultaneous photodegradation of the two azo dyes was also investigated and we observed that the degradation rates achieved in mono and bi-component systems were identical. The repeatability of photocatalytic activity of the photocatalyst was also tested. After five cycles of TiO2 reuse the rate of colour lost was still 77% of the initial rate. The degradation was followed monitoring the change of azo dye concentration by UV-Vis spectroscopy. Results show that the use of an efficient photocatalyst and the adequate selection of optimal operational parameters may easily lead to a complete decolorization of the aqueous solutions of both azo dyes.
nitroderivatives (NPAHs) are ubiquitous in the environment and they are produced in several industrial and combustion processes. Some of these compounds are potent carcinogens/mutagens and their determination in biological samples is an important step for exposure control. A review of the analytical methodologies used for the determination of PAHs and their metabolites in biological samples is presented.
Diffuse reflectance and laser-induced techniques were used to access photochemical and photophysical processes
of benzil in solid supports, namely p-tert-butylcalix[n]arenes with n = 4, 6, and 8. A comparative study was
performed using these results and those obtained with another electronically inert support, silicalite, which is
a hydrophobic zeolite. In the latter substrate, ground-state benzil has the two carbonyl groups in an s-trans
planar conformation while in the calixarenes a distribution of conformers exists, largely dominated by skew
conformations where the carbonyl groups are twisted one to the other. In all substrates, room-temperature
phosphorescence was obtained in air-equilibrated samples. The decay times vary greatly and the largest lifetime
was obtained for benzil/p-tert-butylcalix[6]arene, showing that this host cavity well accommodates benzil,
enhancing its room-temperature phosphorescence. p-tert-Butylcalix[6] and [8]arene molecules provide larger
hydrophobic cavities than silicalite, and inclusion complexes are formed with these hosts and benzil as guest;
p-tert-butylcalix[4]arene does not include benzil. This probe is deposited outside the calix[4] cavity, in the
form of microcrystals. Triplet−triplet absorption of benzil was detected in all cases and is predominant in the
silicalite channel inclusion case. Benzil ketyl radical formation occurs with inclusion in calix[6]arene and
calix[8]arene. In the three cases, benzoyl radical was detected at long times (in the millisecond time scale).
Product analysis and identification clearly show that the main detected degradation photoproducts in all
substrates are benzoyl radical derivatives. Calix[6] and [8]arenes are able to supply hydrogen atoms that
allow also another reaction, the reduction to benzoin through benzil ketyl radical formation.
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