Zero-valent iron nanoparticles entrapped in SiO2 sol-gel matrices: A catalyst for the reduction of several pollutants

Neelam Neelam, Dan Meyerstein, Jaydeep Adhikary, Ariela Burg, Dror Shamir, Yael Albo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Zero-valent iron-nanoparticles (ZVI-NPs) entrapped in silica matrices through a sol-gel procedure are investigated as redox catalysts with BH4 (NaBH4) as the reducing agent. The results indicated that the matrix functions as an efficient and multifunctional catalyst for the reduction of halo-acetic acids (HAAs), [BrO3] and 4-nitrophenol pollutants present in the contaminated water. The present study revealed that the reduction mechanism depends on the nature of the substrate, M0 used and the rate of the reductant addition (batch mode reactor system). The novelty of the present work is double-fold: First, in pointing out that the mechanism of the catalytic de-halogenation reaction depends on the nature of M0-NPs used as a catalyst, probably due to the different over-potential for the HER reaction on each M0-NPs and second, the development of a cost-effective remediation alternative compared to the analogous Au0-NPs or Ag0-NPs catalysts reported in the literature.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105819
Pages (from-to)105819
Number of pages5
JournalCatalysis Communications
Volume133
DOIs
StatePublished - 5 Jan 2020

Keywords

  • De-halogenation
  • Halo-acetic acids
  • Reduction catalyst
  • Sol-gel
  • Zero-valent iron

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • General Chemistry
  • Process Chemistry and Technology
  • Catalysis

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