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Publication details
Ultraviolet photocatalytic degradation of cholesterol on TiO2: secondary ion mass spectrometry
Authors | |
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Year of publication | 2017 |
Type | Article in Periodical |
Magazine / Source | Surface and Interface Analysis |
MU Faculty or unit | |
Citation | |
web | Full Text |
Doi | http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/sia.6129 |
Keywords | photocatalysis; titanium oxide; cholesterol; cholesterol oxidation products; secondary ion mass spectrometry |
Description | Cholesterol (C27H46O stated as M) is used as a model of bio-organic contamination, because this compound is in almost every living organism, and its photocatalytic degradation on titanium oxide (TiO2) surface with UV exposure is investigated. Secondary ion mass spectrometry as a surface-sensitive technique is suited to study this degradation process with focus on intermediates. A fragment of M-OH represents the intact molecule of cholesterol and provides its relative concentration on the surface. The intensity of M-OH decreases after 24-h UV irradiation, and the level of degradation is 89% with the pseudo-first kinetic constant of 0.0207min(-1) within 2h. A fragment of MO-H represents an intermediate as one of the cholesterol oxidation products. The irradiation from a bottom in comparison with a top reveals the differences in the mechanism of the intermediate formation through the intensity and the kinetics with values of factor of 1/3 and 30min, respectively. The roles of electrons and holes, primarily generated in TiO2 by UV, and also of superoxide anion radical and hydroxyl radical, as the secondary reactive species, are discussed to illustrate the bottom/top mechanisms. |