Protecting against micropollutants in water storage tanks using in-situ TiO coated quartz optical fibers.

Water Res

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR; Advanced Interdisciplinary Institute of Environment and Ecology, Beijing Normal University, Zhuhai, 519087, China. Electronic address:

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Photocatalyst-coated optical fibers (P-OFs) can effectively degrade micropollutants like carbamazepine in various water systems by utilizing UV-A LEDs directly in water tanks, avoiding the need for additional separation systems.
  • Current challenges with P-OFs include light management issues, such as oversaturation of photocatalysts and short light transmission distances; however, strategies to improve light uniformity have been developed.
  • Adjustments in optical fiber parameters, such as patchiness and incident angles, led to significant enhancements in photocatalyst activation, achieving a three-fold increase in degradation rates and a 65% reduction in energy consumption.

Article Abstract

Photocatalyst-coated optical fibers (P-OFs) using UV-A LEDs offer a highly promising solution for the degradation of micropollutants within municipal, reuse, industrial or home distribution systems, by integrating P-OFs into water storage tanks. P-OFs have photocatalysts attached to bundles of optical fibers, enabling their direct deployment within tanks. This eliminates the necessity for photocatalyst slurries, which would require additional membrane or separation systems. However, a current limitation of P-OFs is light management, specifically light oversaturation of the coated photocatalysts and short light transmission distances along fibers. This study overcomes this limitation and reveals strategies to improve the light dissipation uniformity along P-OFs, and demonstrates the performance of P-OFs on degrading a model micropollutant, carbamazepine (CBZ). Key tunable variables of fibers and light emission conditions, including photocatalyst coating patchiness (p), minimum light incident angles (θ), radiant flux launched to fibers (Φ), and fiber diameters (D), were modeled to establish their relationships with the light dissipation uniformity in TiO-coated quartz optical fibers (TiO-QOFs). We then validated modeling insights by conducting experiments to examine how these variables influence the generation of evanescent waves which are localized energy on fiber surfaces, leading to either photocatalyst activation or the recapture of unused light back into fibers. We observed substantial enhancements in evanescent waves generation by decreasing p and increasing θ, resulting in uniform light dissipation which reduces light oversaturation and improves light transmission distances. Moreover, these optimizations led to a remarkable three-fold improvement in CBZ degradation rates and a 65% reduction in energy consumption. Such improvement substantially reduces the capital and operational cost and enhances practicality of energy-efficient photocatalysis without additional chemical oxidants for micropollutant degradation in water storage tanks.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2024.121682DOI Listing

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