In-situ monitoring by thermal lens microscopy of a photocatalytic reduction process of hexavalent chromium

Authors

  • E Cedeño Instituto Politécnico Nacional
  • J. Plazas-Saldaña Universidad del Quindio
  • F. Gordillo-Delgado Universidad del Quindio
  • A. Bedoya Instituto Politécnico Nacional
  • Ernesto Marin Instituto Politécnico Nacional

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31349/RevMexFis.64.507

Keywords:

Thermal lens microscopy, Photocatalysis, Hexavalent Chromium, Titanium Dioxide

Abstract

In this work, we describe the application of a micro-spatial thermal lens spectroscopy setup (thermal lens microscope, TLM) with coaxial counter-propagating pump and probe laser beams and an integrated passive optical Fabry-Perot to quantify the Cr-VI concentration in water during a photocatalytic reaction in-situ. A series of test samples was analyzed using the 1,5 diphenil carbazide colorimetric method. A calibration curve was obtained by plotting of the TLM signal as a function of the concentration of Cr(VI) in a range between 0 and 10 μg/L (1 μg/L = 1 ppb, part per billion), with a detection limit of 53 ng/L (1 ng/L = 1 ppt, part per trillion). A solution of 10 μg/L Cr(VI) in distillated water was placed into a cell in contact with an iron-incorporated titanium dioxide film, which was previously grown onto a 1 mm thick glass microscope slide by the sol-gel dip-coating technique. The TLM signal was registered as a function of the photocatalysis time measured from the beginning of the process, radiating the film with UV-violet light. The Cr(VI) concentration was determined with the calibration curve and after the first 50 minutes a reduction of 95 % of Cr(VI) was observed, being the chemical reaction kinetic described by a potential time decreasing function.

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Published

2018-08-31

How to Cite

[1]
E. Cedeño, J. Plazas-Saldaña, F. Gordillo-Delgado, A. Bedoya, and E. Marin, “In-situ monitoring by thermal lens microscopy of a photocatalytic reduction process of hexavalent chromium”, Rev. Mex. Fís., vol. 64, no. 5 Sept-Oct, pp. 507–511, Aug. 2018.