npj Clean Water (Nov 2022)

Hierarchical optofluidic microreactor for water purification using an array of TiO2 nanostructures

  • Hyejeong Kim,
  • Hyunah Kwon,
  • Ryungeun Song,
  • Seonghun Shin,
  • So-Young Ham,
  • Hee-Deung Park,
  • Jinkee Lee,
  • Peer Fischer,
  • Eberhard Bodenschatz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41545-022-00204-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Clean water for human consumption is, in many places, a scarce resource, and efficient schemes to purify water are in great demand. Here, we describe a method to dramatically increase the efficiency of a photocatalytic water purification microreactor. Our hierarchical optofluidic microreactor combines the advantages of a nanostructured photocatalyst with light harvesting by base substrates, together with a herringbone micromixer for the enhanced transport of reactants. The herringbone micromixer further improves the reaction efficiency of the nanostructured photocatalyst by generating counter-rotating vortices along the flow direction. In addition, the use of metal-based substrates underneath the nanostructured catalyst increases the purification capacity by improving the light-harvesting efficiency. The photocatalyst is grown from TiO2 as a nanohelix film, which exhibits a large surface-to-volume ratio and a reactive microstructure. We show that the hierarchical structuring with micro- to nanoscale features results in a device with markedly increased photocatalytic activity as compared with a solid unstructured catalyst surface. This is evidenced by the successful degradation of persistent aqueous contaminants, sulfamethoxazole, and polystyrene microplastics. The design can potentially be implemented with solar photocatalysts in flow-through water purification systems.