Sustainable Chemistry for the Environment (Mar 2024)
Mining wastes as CO oxidation mesoporous catalysts from the Fe-skarns of Serifos Island, Cyclades, Greece
Abstract
The Fe-skarns from the Greek Island of Serifos in Cyclades has been utilized only for the exploitation of magnetite ores, while significantly vast amounts of red and yellow hematite ores remained unexploited as mining wastes. This study explores the effective utilization of such mining wastes per se, as active mesoporous catalysts for energy applications, taking CO oxidation as a model reaction. The results of our multi-analytical study have illustrated that the physicochemical characteristics of the hematite materials can be positively influenced by the implementation of a simple calcination step, while the characteristics of magnetite remained unaffected. The calcined yellow and red mineral hematite from Serifos Fe-skarns mining wastes per se, act beneficial in the catalytic activity with respect to calcined magnetite catalyst. The calcinated counterparts of hematite, and especially yellow hematite, can efficiently be used as a support for depositing Au nanoparticles, and thus achieving even higher activity for CO oxidation (90% CO conversion), at much lower temperatures (T ∼62.0 °C). The mining wastes per se of Serifos, mainly of mesoporous hematite, are particularly active for CO oxidation, without any complex pretreatments or activation or functionalization in the context of circular economy.