Temperature-induced modulation of mesopore size in hierarchically porous amorphous TiO2/ZrO2 beads for improved dye adsorption capacity†
Abstract
Amorphous TiO2/ZrO2 matrices have received widespread interest in adsorption-based water remediation schemes owing to their high adsorption capacity potential in view of their high surface area. However, such potential is often limited by their intrinsic microstructure. Herein, temperature processes were examined in combination with a sol–gel templating technique for the fabrication of micro-meso-macroporous millimeter-sized amorphous TiO2/ZrO2 (64/36% w/w) beads with variable mesopore sizes (6–13 nm). The beads featured high surface areas (up to 273 m2 g−1) and high hydroxyl group densities (up to 4.1 OH nm−2). Unlike the conventional post-synthesis calcination temperature treatment, the temperature treatment applied to the template and the hybrid alginate/TiO2/ZrO2 beads allowed pore size modulation without compromising the amorphous nature of the TiO2/ZrO2 materials, thus retaining the high surface areas. The TiO2/ZrO2 beads displayed high adsorption capabilities (e.g., qmax > 40 mg g−1 compared with <5 mg g−1 for inorganic clays; 25.1 mg g−1 for canola stalks; 43.5 mg g−1 for α-Fe2O3) towards acid orange 7 (AO7), a typical water pollutant. The study demonstrated correlation between the mesopore dimensions and qmax. By enlarging the mesopore of the amorphous TiO2/ZrO2 beads, accessibility of the AO7 molecule to the abundant surface sites, as provided by the high surface areas and surface hydroxyl group densities, was improved. This led to enhanced AO7 adsorption capacities (up to 101 mg g−1). The macroscopic dimension, spherical geometry, and uniform bead size of the TiO2/ZrO2 matrices are attractive attributes as plant-scale chromatography packing.