Photochemistry for pollution abatement

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Abstract

Sunlight is a clean, cheap, and abundant reagent. Many light-initiated reactions can be carried out in water, making photochemistry an ideal tool for pollution abatement and/or elimination. We studied the photoreactivity of different families of common organic micro - pollutants: light-initiated processes in the absence or presence of co-oxidants, and photo - catalyzed reactions using different photocatalysts and composites. Based on the experimental evidences found, detailed transformation mechanisms have been proposed that help understand the reactivity of organic micropollutants and predict their environmental fate. Our approach includes the study of the photophysics for each family of compounds, its reactivity upon direct photolysis, adsorption onto photocatalysts, photocatalytic reactivity, thermo - dynamics, and kinetics of the processes involved (pKa, E°, rate constants, etc.), product analysis, and ecotoxicological assessment. Different commonly overlooked problems, related to the kinetics of the process, are reported, and a model is proposed that includes the possibility of adsorption on different types of active sites, leading to different reactivities. © 2013 IUPAC.

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Canle López, M., Fernández, M. I., Martínez, C., & Santaballa, J. A. (2013). Photochemistry for pollution abatement. Pure and Applied Chemistry, 85(7), 1437–1449. https://doi.org/10.1351/PAC-CON-13-01-10

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