PL EN
Synthesis of anatase titanium dioxide nanostructures via chitosan-polyvinyl alcohol templating for effective reduction of hexavalent chromium
 
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HaUI Institute of Technology, Hanoi University of Industry, Hanoi 100000, Vietnam
 
 
Autor do korespondencji
Ta Thi Huong   

HaUI Institute of Technology, Hanoi University of Industry, Hanoi 100000, Vietnam
 
 
 
SŁOWA KLUCZOWE
DZIEDZINY
STRESZCZENIE
Hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) is a highly toxic and carcinogenic pollutant that poses serious risks to human health and aquatic ecosystems. This study reports a novel green sol–gel approach for synthesizing mesoporous anatase TiO₂ nanostructures using chitosan and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) as soft templating agents. The biopolymers enable homogeneous dispersion of the titanium precursor, forming a uniform gel network. Calcination at 400 °C completely removes the organic templates, producing pure anatase TiO₂ with a high BET surface area of 70 m²/g and narrow mesopores of 2–5 nm. The material exhibited excellent Cr(VI) removal performance, achieving a maximum adsorption capacity of 163.93 mg/g (Langmuir isotherm, R² = 0.9944) and following pseudo-second-order kinetics (R² = 0.9124), confirming chemisorption as the rate-controlling step. Under visible light, toxic Cr(VI) was effectively reduced to less harmful Cr(III), which was stably immobilized on the TiO₂ surface without significant pore blockage. This mechanism was verified by strong fluorescence in Raman spectra, enhanced hydroxyl and Cr–O bands in FTIR, a zeta potential shift from −57.2 mV to −48.1 mV, and Cr detection via EDX. The mesoporous structure remained stable after treatment (BET surface area ~72 m²/g). This low-cost, environmentally friendly biopolymer-templating strategy, optimized by Response Surface Methodology (RSM-CCD), provides a promising sustainable solution for heavy metal remediation in wastewater.
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