In
this work, a spiral microchannel reactor was used to study the
photocatalytic degradation process of oxytetracycline (OTC) in a titanium
dioxide (TiO2) slurry system. The influence of parameters
such as residence time, TiO2 dosage, OTC concentration,
light intensity, and concentration of added ions (NO3
–, SO4
2–, Ca2+, Fe3+) on OTC removal was systematically investigated,
and the degradation stability of OTC in the microreactor was evaluated.
The results show that under the best experimental conditions, the
degradation rate of OTC can reach 99.33%, the initial stage apparent
reaction rate constant is 7.7124 min–1, and the
space–time yield is 142.79 m3 pollutants/(m3 reactor day). In addition, the results prove the high efficiency
and stability of OTC degradation in the microreactor. OTC can be efficiently
degraded under high TiO2 dosage, high initial OTC concentration,
and low light intensity, which demonstrates the outstanding advantages
of spiral microchannels for OTC degradation in slurry systems. This
study has a guiding significance for the efficient photocatalytic
degradation of tetracycline antibiotics in slurry systems.