Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering: Xiao-Dan Xie, Kefu Zhou, Bor-Yann Chen, Chang-Tang Chang
Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering: Xiao-Dan Xie, Kefu Zhou, Bor-Yann Chen, Chang-Tang Chang
Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering: Xiao-Dan Xie, Kefu Zhou, Bor-Yann Chen, Chang-Tang Chang
A R T I C L E I N F O A B S T R A C T
Article history:
Received 23 July 2016 Microporous ZSM-5 and mesoporous MCM-41 loaded with TiO2 were synthesized to remove
Received in revised form 6 October 2016 oxytetracycline in aqueous solutions. The adsorption of oxytetracycline showed that MCM-41 had
Accepted 8 October 2016 higher adsorption capacity than ZSM-5 and that this capacity changed little after TiO2 loading. Four
Available online 11 October 2016 factors affecting photocatalytic degradation were investigated by uniform design; these factors included
the initial pH of oxytetracycline solution, reaction temperature, dosage of catalysts, and TiO2 content of
Keywords: catalysts. Single-factor experiment confirmed that experimental values agreed with predicted ones by
Oxytetracycline the regression formula of the uniform design. After recycling and reuse for five cycles, the composites
Composite
retained their degradation performance. Both adsorption and photocatalytic degradation experiments
Uniform design
indicated that MCM-41 was more suitable than ZSM-5 for loading TiO2 to remove oxytetracycline
Toxicity assessment
because of the former’s better absorption properties. The biomass at the stationary growth phase and the
maximum specific growth rate of Escherichia coli were used to assess toxicity during photocatalytic
degradation, which linearly decreased with increased oxytetracycline degradation efficiency.
ã 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jece.2016.10.012
2213-3437/ã 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
4454 X.-D. Xie et al. / Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 4 (2016) 4453–4465
Fig. 1. Stick and ball model (a) and Connolly molecular surface structure (b) of OTC.
prove the usability of the experimental design model in this The crystal phases of the composites were determined with an
research field. X-ray diffractometer (XRD, Rigaku Ultima IV). Their shape and fine
In this research, the adsorption and photocatalytic degradation structure were observed by scanning election microscopy (SEM;
capability of microporous and mesoporous composites, TiO2 Mac Science, MXP18) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM;
loading on ZSM-5 and MCM-41 zeolite were prepared and JEOL, JEM-2000 FX). The element distribution of composites was
compared. The performance of photocatalytic degradation was analyzed by energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS; HORIBA, EMX)
explored by uniform design with OTC simulated wastewater. and inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy
Uniform design was adopted to study photocatalytic degradation (ICP-AES, Agilent, 4100).The specific surface area and pore
process for the first time. The predicted results of uniform design distribution was studied by an N2 adsorption/desorption analyzer
and actual results of single factor experiments were compared. To (Micromeritics, ASAP 2020N).
assess the toxic effect of OTC and its subsequent degradation
solution to Escherichia coli, two calculating methods, the maximum 2.3. Adsorption experiment
specific growth rate and the biomass at stationary growth phase of
inhibition rate were compared. The OTC solution of 10 mg L1 was freshly prepared in ultra-
pure water. The initial pH was unadjusted and ranged from 4.63 to
2. Materials and methods 4.91. The amount of material used was 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, and 0.5 g,
whereas the solution volume was 100 mL. The materials were
2.1. Materials mixed in a group of glass conical flasks on a constant bath shaker
shielded from light at 125 rpm at 25 C. Throughout the reaction of
Oxytetracycline hydrochloride (OTC, 95%–100.5%) was pur- 80 min, samples were taken at predetermined time and filtrated
chased from Panreac. The raw ZSM-5 zeolite and TiO2 (P25) using filter membrane (0.2 mm) before analysis.
powder, as well as the chromatographically pure acetonitrile and
triethylamine were purchased from ACROS. Tetraethyl orthosili- 2.4. Photocatalytic degradation experiment
cate (TEOS, 98%) and hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide
(CTMABr, 99%) were purchased from Aldrich. Ethanol (99.5%), Photocatalytic experiments were performed in cylindrical
ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid disodium (EDTA-2Na), ammoni- reactor with the diameter of 7 cm and height of 40 cm, which
um acetate, HCl, H2SO4, formic acid, NaOH, and ammonia water were shielded from external light. Ultraviolet (UV) lamp (254 nm,
(28%) were analytical grade and purchased from SHIYAKU. Ultra- 0.97 mW cm2; APUV-12F, Sparxic) was used as the single light
pure water with a resistivity more than 18.00 MV cm was prepared source. The 1 L solution was continuously stirred by a magnetic
by OTUN ultrapure water system. agitator at 100 rpm. The pH was adjusted with 1 mol L1 HCl or
1 mol L1 NaOH. The temperature was controlled by a constant-
2.2. Preparation and characterization of the composites temperature water circulator. The initial pH of OTC solution,
reaction temperature, dosage of catalysts, and the TiO2 content in
MCM-41 was synthesized according to our previous method catalysts were changed according to the uniform design. The
[33]. Briefly, 4.6 g of CTMABr was dissolved in 95 mL of distilled device is shown schematically in Fig. S1. Throughout the reaction
water. A homogeneous transparent solution was made by for 60 min, samples were taken at predetermined times and
continuously stirring with a laboratory stirrer before ammonia filtered with a filter membrane (0.2 mm) before analysis.
water was added to the solution. The mixture was stirred for
15 min before 8.8 mL of TEOS was added. The mixture was stirred
for 12 h at room temperature. The white precipitate was filtered 2.5. Recycling experiment
and washed consecutively with distilled water and dried at 100 C
for 8 h. The material was finally calcined at 550 C for 5 h to burn The photocatalyst was recycled and reused 5 times to study its
out the template to obtain MCM-41. stability. In the first cycle, 0.01 g TiO2 and the composite with an
Composites were synthesized by the solid-dispersion method equal amount of TiO2 were added to the 10 mg L1 OTC solution
[34]. TiO2 was uniformly dissolved in ethanol after ultrasonic without adjusting pH. Subsequently, the 1 L mixture was continu-
dispersion for 30 min. ZSM-5 or MCM-41 was added into the ously stirred by a magnetic agitator at 100 rpm. The temperature
suspension with rapid stirring at room temperature for 1 h to was controlled at 25 C by a constant-temperature water circulator.
enable TiO2 to be fully adsorbed onto the surface of ZSM-5 or MCM- After the reaction for 150 min, samples were purified with a filter
41. The suspension was dried at 100 C for 8 h to remove the solvent membrane (0.2 mm) before analysis. At the end of the first cycle,
and calcined at 400 C for 2 h. The products were finally ground the photocatalyst was filtered by filter paper, dried at 100 C, and
into ultrafine powder and referred to as xTZ or xTM, where x was calcified at 400 C for 2 h to remove adsorbed intermediates. The
the weight percent of TiO2 in the composite. same procedure was employed after every cycle of usage.
X.-D. Xie et al. / Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 4 (2016) 4453–4465 4455
Fig. 2. SEM images of (a) ZSM-5, (b)10TZ, (c) MCM-41, and (d)10TM, and TEM images of (e) ZSM-5, (f)10TZ, (g) MCM-41, and (h)10TM.
4456 X.-D. Xie et al. / Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 4 (2016) 4453–4465
The OTC was monitored by a HPLC system (Ultimate 3000, 3.1. Characterization of composites
Thermofisher) consisting of an Acclaim 120 C18 reverse phase
column (4.6 mm 250 mm, 5 mm). The isocratic mobile phase was 3.1.1. SEM, TEM and element analysis
88% A with ammonium acetate (0.25 mol L1), EDTA-2Na solution The morphologies of ZSM-5, MCM-41, 10TZ, and 10TM were
(0.1 mol L1), and triethylamine at volume ratio of 100/10/1, investigated by SEM (Fig. 2). The particle size of ZSM-5 ranged from
whereas 12% B was acetonitrile. The flow rate was 1.0 mL min1. 0.5 mm to 3 mm; almost all MCM-41 particles were smaller than
The detection wavelength was 280 nm. 0.5 mm. No major changes were observed in the ZSM-5 structure;
A HPLC–MS system with positive ion electrospray ionization TiO2 was uniformly dispersed without significant aggregation.
source and ACQUITY CSH C18 reverse phase column (1.7 mm, However, the TiO2 particle size of 21 nm was larger than the pore
2.1 10 mm) was used to analysis degradation intermediates of size of ZSM-5 (5.1-5.6 Å, as measured by Blasioli et al. [35]) or
OTC. The flow rate was 0.2 mL min1. Gradient conditions of mobile MCM-41 (approximately 3 nm, as measured in our pervious study
phase A (0.1% formic acid aqueous solution) and B (0.1% formic acid [33]). Therefore, the TiO2 particles are attached to the outer surface
acetonitrile solution) were listed in Table S1. The value of capillary rather than the inner surface of ZSM-5 or MCM-41. It can be
voltage, ion source temperature, desolvation temperature, des- observed from TEM images (Fig. 2) that MCM-41 with lattice
olvation gas flow rate, and cone voltage was 2.5 kV, 150 C, 500 C, spacing of 2.5 nm was successfully synthesized. Lattice spacing of
1000 L h1, and 16 V, respectively. Detection mode was multiple ZSM-5 is 0.39 nm. TiO2 particles in 10TZ and 10TM composites are
reaction monitoring. uniformly distributed. EDS spectra (Fig. 3) shows that the major
elements in ZSM-5 and MCM-41 are silicon and oxygen. Aluminum
(tag manually added in Fig. 3) is undetectable in ZSM-5. Both 10TZ
2.7. Toxicity tests and 10TM contain titanium. However, EDS elemental analysis is
semi-quantitative with ratio of surface elements. Therefore, ICP-
The toxicity of photocatalytic degradation solution was AES was used to further analyze elements ratio. The results showed
evaluated with E. coli DH5a. The strain was activated in 50 mL that, titanium content of 10TZ and 10TM was 5.54% and 5.71%
of Luria–Bertani (LB) broth (10 g L1 peptone, 5 g L1 yeast, 10 g L1 respectively, which is close to the expected 10% TiO2, indicating
NaCl) at 37 C for 12 h in a constant-temperature shaking incubator little TiO2 loss during preparation process.
at 125 rpm. A certain amount of activated E. coli and 5 mL of the
photocatalytic degradation solution was added into 50 mL of LB 3.1.2. N2 adsorption-desorption isotherms, pore and BET surface area
broth such that the initial optical density (OD) is 0.10. The mixture The surface area of ZSM-5, MCM-41, and the composites were
was cultured at 37 C for 12 h in a constant-temperature shaking determined based on the N2 adsorption-desorption. According to
incubator at 125 rpm. Meanwhile, 5 mL of sterile distilled water the classification of IUPAC, the shape of hysteresis loop in N2
was used instead of the photocatalytic degradation solution as adsorption/desorption curve can be divided into H1, H2, H3, and
control. Samples of 0.5 mL were taken at predetermined times H4 four types [36]. The isotherms of 10TZ composite in Fig. 4(a) is
from each culture flask to measure their OD; the growth curve of E. type H4, indicated narrow pores in material which is caused by
coli was recorded. bond of disc- and plate-shaped particles [37]. The isotherms of
Fig. 3. EDS spectra of (a) ZSM-5, (b)10TZ, (c) MCM-41, and (d)10TM.
X.-D. Xie et al. / Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 4 (2016) 4453–4465 4457
1.4
(b)
10TZ
1.2 10TM
(a)
1.0
Pore Volume (cm /g nm)
TiO2
.8
3
20TZ
.6
Realative Intensity
10TZ
.4
5TZ
.2
1TZ
0.0
ZSM-5
0 2 4 6 8 10
Fig. 4. (a) N2 adsorption–desorption isotherm, (b) pore volume and pore size
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
distribution of 10TZ and 10TM composites.
2θ ( ° )
10TM composite is type H1, indicated that pores with similar pore
shape and uniform pore size are orderly arranged [37]. Therefore,
MCM-41 with neat pores was successfully synthesized and its
structure was not altered in composite, which agreed with the small ang le (b)
results of TEM. The pore volumes of the 10TZ and 10TM materials
were 0.081 and 0.936 cm3 g1, respectively. The main pore sizes of TiO2
are listed in Table 1. The BET surface area of the ZSM-5 was 10TM
311 m2 g1. With the increasing TiO2 weight ratio, the surface area
of composites was slightly increased from 311 m2 g1 to 347 m2 g1 5TM
then decreased to 295 m2 g1. For the TZ composite, the perfect
dispersity was proved by increasing the surface area until heavier 2TM
Table 1
BET surface area of ZSM-5, MCM-41, and composites.
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
Materials BET surface area (m2 g1) Materials BET surface area (m2 g1)
ZSM-5 311 MCM-41 1100
2θ ( ° )
2TZ 333 2TM 993
Fig. 5. XRD patterns of (a) ZSM-5, TiO2 and TZ composites, (b) MCM-41, TiO2, and
5TZ 347 5TM 934
TM composites. Characteristic peaks: anatase (black diamonds), rutile (empty
10TZ 327 10TM 817
diamonds), ZSM-5 (black circles), and MCM-41 (red triangles). (For interpretation of
20TZ 295 20TM 812
the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web
version of this article.)
4458 X.-D. Xie et al. / Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 4 (2016) 4453–4465
Fig. 6 shows the time courses of OTC concentration when ZSM- Materials qe (mg g1) kpos (g mg1 min1) t1/2 (min) R2
5, MCM-41, 10TZ, and 10TM were used as adsorbents. To evaluate ZSM-5 1.89 0.249 2.13 0.966
the adsorption rate, a pseudo-second-order model was applied to 10TZ 1.91 0.154 3.40 0.977
the experimental data as Eqs. (1) and (2): MCM-41 8.59 0.019 6.23 0.990
10TM 6.39 0.055 2.85 0.969
dqt
¼ kpso ðqe qt Þ2 ð1Þ
dt
and the TiO2 content in catalysts (X4). An OTC degradation
efficiency of 60 min was considered as a response (YTZ and YTM).
t t 1 According to the uniform design table U11(116) and its usage table
¼ þ ð2Þ
qt qe kpso q2e (Tables S2 and S3), a 4-factor and 11-level uniform design leads to a
where kpso is the pseudo-second-order adsorption rate constant; qt total number of 11 experiments with a deviation of 0.3528 [38].
and qe are the amounts of OTC adsorbed per gram of zeolite at t or The values of different factors and responses are listed in Table 3.
after reaching the adsorption equilibrium, respectively. Notably, In the photocatalytic degradation process, the degradation
kpso is an apparent rate constant and a complex function of the efficiency of tetracyclines usually increases with the initial pH,
initial concentration of OTC (C0), which is different from the temperature, and catalyst dosage until the optimum is reached
adsorption equilibrium constant. Furthermore, t1/2 is often used to before the efficiency declines [39–45]. The quadratic equations X1,
evaluate the adsorption rate, which is the time required to adsorb X2, and X3 were anticipated to simulate their effects. The TiO2
half the amount of qe. t = t1/2; the equation: qt = qe/2 were inserted content in catalysts will not contribute negatively to the normal
into Eq. (2) to obtain t1/2 in Eq. (3): degradation efficiency. However, with the increased TiO2 content,
the growth of the degradation efficiency slows down, which is
1 expected to fit with the quadratic equation of X4. By considering
t1=2 ¼ ð3Þ
kpso qe the possible interactions between each factor, six interactive items
The values of qe, kpso, and t1/2 were calculated for each of the were introduced to the equation. Finally, a multivariate non-linear
experimental conditions as shown in Table 2. model was built to represent the effects of each factor on the
The equilibrium adsorption of ZSM-5, 10TZ, MCM-41, and 10TM response:
was 1.89, 1.91, 8.59, and 6.39 mg g1, respectively. The equilibrium Y TZ orY TM ¼ b0 þ b1 X 1 þ b2 X 2 þ b3 X 3 þ b4 X 4 þ b5 X 1 2 þ b6 X 2 2
adsorption quantity of ZSM-5 was low because micropores in the
þ b7 X 3 2 þ b8 X 4 2 þ b9 X 1 X 2 þ b10 X 1 X 3 þ b11 X 1 X 4
ZSM-5 zeolite (pore diameter 6.6 Å in this study) were not þ b12 X 2 X 3 þ b13 X 2 X 4 þ b14 X 3 X 4 ð4Þ
appropriate for large molecular structures [35], such as OTC
molecules with volume of 325.5 Å3 (calculated from Connolly where b0, b1, b2, . . . , b14 are coefficients. This equation contains 15
solvent-excluded volume modle, Fig. 1). Loading TiO2 slightly unknown coefficients, which are more than the 11 total
improved the adsorption performance. For mesoporous MCM-41, experimental times. Thus, the variables need to be screened. After
loading TiO2 weakened the adsorption capacity, thereby indicating excluding the items with non-significant contributions by the
that the low adsorption properties of TiO2 limited the adsorption enter method (IBM SSPS Statistics 19), the regression equations
capacity of TM composite. The t1/2 values of all materials were less are:
than 7 min, thereby confirming the rapid adsorption and removal
of OTC from the aqueous solution. Y TZ ¼ 23:63 þ 3:28X 1 þ 19:68X 2 þ 2:40X 3 0:21X 1 2
1:49X 2 2 0:73X 3 2 0:58X 4 2 1:55X 3 X 4 ð5Þ
3.3. Uniform design on photocatalytic degradation of OTC
The factors investigated in our study were the initial pH of OTC Y TM ¼ 39:45 þ 2:41X 1 þ 3:54X 2 þ 6:86X 3 0:31X 1 2
solution (X1), reaction temperature (X2), dosage of catalysts (X3), 0:21X 2 2 1:15X 3 2 0:65X 4 2 1:54X 3 X 4 ð6Þ
Table 3
Experiment parameters of uniform design.
Table 4
Statistical parameters of the regression equation.
Table 5
Conditions of single factor experiments.
Fig. 8. Predicted and actual values of single factor experiment, factors: (a) the initial pH of OTC solution (X1), (b) reaction temperature (X2), (c) dosage of catalysts (X3), and (d)
TiO2 content in catalysts (X4).
X.-D. Xie et al. / Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 4 (2016) 4453–4465 4461
experiment, 10% can be chosen as the optimal TiO2 content, which Recycling times
is close to the predicted optimal content of 15% and 12.5% for TZ
Fig. 10. Degradation efficiency of OTC in different recycling times.
and TM composites, respectively.
The comparison of predicted and experimental values is shown
in Fig. 9. The comparison points of uniform design are basically on
predicted line, whereas the single factor experimental points show
a certain bias. The result of correlation analysis was a significance
value below 0.01; the Pearson correlation coefficient of the TZ and
TM composites is 0.987 and 0.971, respectively. Therefore, the
regression equations obtained by uniform design can forecast 100
100
relatively accurate results for both TZ and TM composites. 80
Iμ (%) 60
40
3.5. Recycling of materials 80
20
0
As seen in Fig. 10, the degradation performance of the TZ 60 0 30 60 90 120 150
Iμ (%)
composite dropped by only 5% after recycling for five times, Time (min)
100
Uniform design - TZ
Single factor test - TZ 100
60
Predicted degradation (%)
40
80
20
60 0
60 0 30 60 90 120 150
IX (%)
Time (min)
40
40
20
UV
20 0 TZ
TM
(b)
0 20 40 60 80 100
0
0 20 40 60 80 100 C/C 0 (%)
Actual degradation (%) Fig. 11. Toxicity assessment by (a) the maximum specific growth rate and (b) the
biomass at stationary growth phase (insets: changes of inhibition rate with the
Fig. 9. Comparison of predicted values and actual experiment data. time).
4462 X.-D. Xie et al. / Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 4 (2016) 4453–4465
Table 6
The intermediate products analyzed by HLPC-MS.
m/z Relative abundance (%) Possible molecular formula Possible molecular structure
10TZ 10TM
87 100 100 C4H6O2
C5H10O
111 50 40 C6H6O2
C7H10O
C8H14
127 74 29 C6H6O3
C7H10O2
C8H14O
165 22 23 C9H8O3
C10H12O2
C11H16O
179 10 16 C12H18O
C11H14O2
X.-D. Xie et al. / Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 4 (2016) 4453–4465 4463
Table 6 (Continued)
m/z Relative abundance (%) Possible molecular formula Possible molecular structure
10TZ 10TM
C10H10O3
225 15 18 C11H12O5
C12H16O4
3.6. Toxicity assessment Furthermore, the loss and change of their substituent groups
causes lower steric resistance and easier penetration into the cells
The biomass of the stationary growth phase (X) and the of microorganisms [56,57], which subsequently leads to higher
maximum specific growth rate (m, h1) can be used to evaluate the inhibition of growth rate, as shown by positive bias in Fig. 11(a).
growth of microorganisms and to assess the toxicity of additives However, after 12 h of culture and proliferation, the ability to retain
[54]. The OD value of E. coli DH5a at 12 h was considered as X, and antibacterial activity and the potential long-term effects on
m was obtained according to Eq. (7): antibiotic resistance limit the inhibition rate of photoproducts
[58], as shown by the good liner relationship between IX and
d ln½OD 1 d½OD
m¼ ¼ ð7Þ degradation efficiency in Fig. 11(b). By comparing the two methods
dt ½OD dt
for toxicity assessment, IX can be calculated from less data and the
where t is the culture time. On the curve of ln[OD] versus t, the error is relatively smaller, whereas Im provides more information
maximum slope is m. m and X of the initial OTC solution are defined on the acute toxicity. Intermediate products were detected using a
as m0 and X0, whereas those of the control group are mm and Xm, HPLC–MS system and listed in Table 6. Only intermediate products
correspondingly. The relative toxicity of the photodegradation of low molecular weight were detected (Fig. S8), in degradation
solution is expressed by the inhibition rates, Im and IX, as shown in solution using both 10TZ and 10TM composites. It proved that four-
Eqs. (8) and (9). membered ring structure was destroyed during degradation using
both 10TZ and 10TM composites. It is consistent with the results of
mm m
Im ð%Þ ¼ 100 ð8Þ toxicity assessment, which indicated no toxic intermediates.
mm m0
4. Conclusion
Xm X
IX ð%Þ ¼ 100 ð9Þ TZ and TM composites were synthesized to remove OTC in
Xm X0
aqueous solutions. Characterization showed that TiO2 was loaded
During photolysis and two photocatalytic degradation process- on the outer surface of ZSM-5 and MCM-41, which decreased the
es, the toxicity appeared to gradually decline as shown in the insets specific surface area, without the change in crystal form of any raw
of Fig. 11. For both photocatalytic degradation processes, Im and IX materials. The adsorption of OTC showed that mesoporous MCM-
have a good linear relationship with the OTC degradation efficiency 41 had a higher adsorption capacity than microporous ZSM-5, and
as shown in Figs.11(a) and 8(b), thereby proving the agreement of the adsorption property minimally changed after TiO2 loading.
Im and IX with the toxicity assessment of photocatalytic degrada- Among the four factors investigated by uniform design, the
tion. For photolysis, the linear relationship of IX and the OTC reaction temperature greatly influenced the TZ composites,
degradation efficiency is better than that of Im, which has a certain whereas the dosage of catalyst decided the performance of TM
positive bias, mainly in the first half of photolysis. Previous studies composites. The interaction between dosage and TiO2 content,
suggested that the main photolysis products of tetracyclines still namely, the TiO2 dosage, was a significant factor that cannot be
contain the characteristic tetra-phenyl structure [44,55,56]. neglected. The single factor experiment confirmed that the
4464 X.-D. Xie et al. / Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 4 (2016) 4453–4465
experimental values agreed with the predictions by the regression using immobilized TiO2-based zeolite composites, Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res. Int.
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