• Title/Summary/Keyword: Agglomerate

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Application of ZVI/TiO2 towards Clean-up of the Contaminated Soil with Polychlorinated Biphenyls (ZVI/TIO2를 이용한 폴리염화비페닐로 오염된 토양 정화)

  • Jae Wook Park;Yun Jin Jo;Dong-Keun Lee
    • Clean Technology
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    • v.29 no.2
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    • pp.118-125
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    • 2023
  • Once a site is contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), serious environmental and human health risks are inevitable. Therefore, innovative but economical in situ remediation technologies must be immediately applied to the contaminated site. Recently, nanoscale zero-valent iron (nano-ZVI) particles have successfully been applied for the dechlorination of various chlorinated organic compounds like TCE, PCE and DDT, and they are considered to be environmentally safe due to the high abundance of iron in the earth's crust. Nano-ZVIs are much more reactive than granular ones, but tend to agglomerate due to their high surface energy and magnetic properties. In order to prevent them from being agglomerated toward larger particles, TiO2 was used as a support to immobilize the nano-ZVI particles as much as possible. 10wt% ZVI/TiO2 was prepared by adding NaBH4 slowly into an FeSO4/TiO2 aqueous slurry. In spite of their non-uniformity in size, the nano-ZVI particles were quite successfully dispersed onto the exterior surface of a non-porous TiO2 powder. The ZVI/TiO2 was then employed to degrade Aroclor 1242, a kind of PCBs standard, in spiked soil, and its reactivity towards the degradation of Aroclor 1242 was investigated. The fabricated ZVI/TiO2 degraded Aroclor 1242 in soil quite effectively, but the creation of remaining dechlorinated compounds, possibly high molecular weight hydrocarbons, in the soil was unavoidable.

Ultrathin Carbon Shell-Coated Intermetallic Alloy Nanoparticles for Oxygen Reduction Reaction in Fuel Cells (초박형 카본쉘이 코팅된 금속간 화합물 합금 나노 입자로 구성된 연료전지용 산소 환원 반응 촉매)

  • Hyeonwoo Choi;Keonwoo Ko;Yoonseong Choi;Jiho Min;Yunjin Kim;Sourabh Sunil Chougule;Khikmatulla Davletbaev;Chavan Abhishek Arjun;Beomjun Pak;Namgee Jung
    • Korean Journal of Materials Research
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    • v.34 no.4
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    • pp.208-214
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    • 2024
  • To fabricate intermetallic nanoparticles with high oxygen reduction reaction activity, a high-temperature heat treatment of 700 to 1,000 ℃ is required. This heat treatment provides energy sufficient to induce an atomic rearrangement inside the alloy nanoparticles, increasing the mobility of particles, making them structurally unstable and causing a sintering phenomenon where they agglomerate together naturally. These problems cannot be avoided using a typical heat treatment process that only controls the gas atmosphere and temperature. In this study, as a strategy to overcome the limitations of the existing heat treatment process for the fabrication of intermetallic nanoparticles, we propose an interesting approach, to design a catalyst material structure for heat treatment rather than the process itself. In particular, we introduce a technology that first creates an intermetallic compound structure through a primary high-temperature heat treatment using random alloy particles coated with a carbon shell, and then establishes catalytic active sites by etching the carbon shell using a secondary heat treatment process. By using a carbon shell as a template, nanoparticles with an intermetallic structure can be kept very small while effectively controlling the catalytically active area, thereby creating an optimal alloy catalyst structure for fuel cells.