| Literature DB >> 28793692 |
Simona Ortelli1, Anna Luisa Costa2, Michele Dondi3.
Abstract
Self-cleaning applications using TiO₂ coatings on various supporting media have been attracting increasing interest in recent years. This work discusses the issue of self-cleaning textile production on an industrial scale. A method for producing self-cleaning textiles starting from a commercial colloidal nanosuspension (nanosol) of TiO₂ is described. Three different treatments were developed for purifying and neutralizing the commercial TiO₂ nanosol: washing by ultrafiltration; purifying with an anion exchange resin; and neutralizing in an aqueous solution of ammonium bicarbonate. The different purified TiO₂ nanosols were characterized in terms of particle size distribution (using dynamic light scattering), electrical conductivity, and ζ potential (using electrophoretic light scattering). The TiO₂-coated textiles' functional properties were judged on their photodegradation of rhodamine B (RhB), used as a stain model. The photocatalytic performance of the differently treated TiO₂-coated textiles was compared, revealing the advantages of purification with an anion exchange resin. The study demonstrated the feasibility of applying commercial TiO₂ nanosol directly on textile surfaces, overcoming problems of existing methods that limit the industrial scalability of the process.Entities:
Keywords: anion exchange resin; nano-TiO2; photocatalytic performance; purification process
Year: 2015 PMID: 28793692 PMCID: PMC5458890 DOI: 10.3390/ma8115437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Physicochemical characteristics of TiO2 nanosol samples.
| Sample | Nominal pH | pH * | D50DLS (nm) | Electrical Conductivity (mS/cm) | pHi.e.p. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TAC | 1.5 | 2.9 | 36 | 1.18 | 7.09 |
| TACF | 4.0 | 3.3 | 42 | 0.25 | 6.92 |
| TACR | 4.5 | 4.2 | 94 | 0.05 | 6.91 |
| TACBIC | – | 5.0 ** | – | – | – |
* pH measurement of nanosol (0.1 wt % TiO2 concentration); ** pH measurement onto textile surface.
Figure 1Schematic representation of the dip-pad-dry-cure method.
Figure 2XRD diffractograms of TAC (light gray), TACF (medium gray) and TACR (black); (A = anatase; B = brookite).
Figure 3ζ potential vs. pH of TAC, TACF and TACR samples.
Figure 4Influence of pH on pHi.e.p. and electrical conductivity.
Figure 5SEM micrographs of: (a) an uncoated fabric fiber and (b) a fabric fiber coated with the TACF nanosol.
Figure 6Increase in photocatalytic efficiency as a function of pH (▪) and electrical conductivity (●).
Photocatalytic results obtained on TiO2-coated fabric samples.
| Sample | Photocatalytic Efficiency (%) | Increase in Photocatalytic Efficiency * |
|---|---|---|
| TAC | 68.5 | 1.54 |
| TACF | 84.3 | 1.90 |
| TACR | 92.5 | 2.08 |
| TACBIC | 73.2 | 1.65 |
* vis-à-vis the uncoated fabric sample (photocatalytic efficiency: 44.4%).