Challenges and Opportunities of Using Titanium Dioxide Photocatalysis on Cement-Based Materials
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. TiO2 Fundamentals
3. Cement-Based Materials Loaded with TiO2
4. Multifunctional Properties
4.1. Self-Cleaning Properties
4.2. Air-Purifying Properties
4.3. Antimicrobial Properties
5. Conclusions
- First, at the laboratory scale, nano titanium dioxide (mainly anatase, rutile and its combination P25) has shown ability, under UV-A exposure, to degrade organic and inorganic substances in solid, gas and liquid phases. However, the promising efficiencies obtained at laboratory scale are not enough for in situ application in cement-based materials towards the development of air-purifying, self-cleaning and antiseptic buildings and infrastructure. This situation is mainly associated with the limited capacity of TiO2 to be photoactivated exclusively with UV-A. Therefore, more research about doped TiO2 and novel semiconductors should be developed to obtain higher efficiencies. Semiconductors such as ZnO, ZnS, CdS, CdSe and CdTe seem to be promising [65]. Similarly, other complementary nanotechnologies should be researched; recently promising results have been obtained with photocatalytic polyurethane coatings containing modified C60 fullerene additives [66] or using synthetized SiO2@TiO2 coatings [50].
- Second, although there has been wide discussion about the best method to load cement-based materials with TiO2, it is now clear that coatings and mixing technologies have different advantages/disadvantages regarding their application. For example, coatings use less catalyst material and expose more efficiently the nanoparticles to UV-A and polluting substances. However, coatings might have durability problems when exposed to high weathering or aggressive environmental conditions. Thus, coatings result as useful for application on tunnels and buildings, while TiO2 mixing technology is very useful for pavements and roads, where there are high weathering and aggressive environmental conditions. Loading TiO2 during concrete or mortar mixing has been normally done in amounts around 5 to 10% of the cement or binder content (weight basis). In this addition range, generally the mechanical and durability properties have not been affected. On the contrary, most research results indicate an increase in the compressive and flexural strengths. This is mainly associated with a denser material structure, evidenced by SEM. Still, resistance to sulphate and leachate attack seem to be reduced when adding TiO2 to cement-based materials. Therefore, it is important to adjust design methods to determine optimal TiO2 dosage.
- Third, although countries such as Japan, China, Italy, Belgium, France, United Kingdom and the Netherlands have constructed buildings and infrastructure using TiO2-loaded cementitious materials [67], the obtained self-cleaning, air-purifying and antimicrobial properties still need to be improved. Regarding self-cleaning buildings, particularly when using white cement and TiO2, dirty surfaces, different white intensities and even cracks have been reported. Similarly, although high removal efficiencies towards organic and inorganic air pollutants have been reported, the environmental conditions, particularly rain and high humidity, significantly reduced TiO2 photocatalytic efficiency. With respect to antimicrobial properties, although there has been microbial growth inhibition using TiO2-loaded cementitious materials at laboratory scale tests, enhancing the TiO2 photocatalytic activity to all fouling microorganisms and proving the long-lasting effect are still major concerns for developing the so-called antimicrobial cement-based materials.
- In general, although intensive research on photocatalytic cement-based materials has developed worldwide during the last 20 years, more innovative and strategic research should be done towards the massive application at real scale. Environmental and weathering conditions are demanding very efficient photocatalyst materials or even complementary technologies, e.g., coming from the architectural design, to develop self-cleaning, air-purifying and antimicrobial properties on buildings and infrastructure. In order to achieve this goal, more realistic laboratory tests, modelling prior to real application, Life Cycle Assessments (LCA) and Social Life Cycle Assessments (S-LCA) should be performed; particularly the latter two, as self-cleaning, antimicrobial and air-purifying properties have a positive potential impact by increasing building and infrastructure durability and reducing air pollution, while nanomaterial production has a potential negative environmental impact, a life cycle thinking approach, which is about going beyond the traditional focus on production site and manufacturing processes to include environmental, social and economic impacts of a product over its entire life cycle, is required to develop truly circular economy models in the construction sector [68,69].
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
References
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Material | Application Process | Quantity | Geometry | Compressive Strength (28 Days) | Flexural Strength (28 Days) | Modulus of Elasticity | Durability | Observations | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Exposure Medium | Compressive Strength (360 Days) | |||||||||
NT (nano TiO2) | Mixing technique | 5% by weight of OPC replacement | 70.6 mm side. | 16.21% higher than the control specimen. | - | - | Tap water. | Higher than the control specimen. | Mild steel bar of 3 mm diameter was used as embedding reinforcement. | Daniyal et al. [28] |
26.14% higher than the control specimen. | - | - | Saline water. | Higher than the control specimen. | ||||||
25.80% higher than the control specimen. | - | - | Acidic solution. | Higher than the control specimen. | ||||||
Anatase I | Mixing technique | 10% by weight | 50 mm diameter, 100 mm height. | −3.70% | - | −38.90% | - | - | - | Victor et al. [29] |
Anatase II | 17.30% | - | −26% | - | - | - | ||||
Rutile | 10.50% | - | −30.10% | - | - | - | ||||
NT (nano TiO2) | Mixing technique | 3 wt% of cement. | 50 mm side. | 36% higher than the control specimen. | - | - | - | - | Fly ash was added with a dosage of 30% wt.% of cement. | Siang et al. [1] |
40 mm side, 160 mm height. | - | 11% higher than the control specimen. | - | - | - | |||||
Anatase | Mixing technique | 3% of the binder weight | 25.4 mm × 25.4 mm × 279.4 mm | 10% higher than the control specimen. | 3.80% | - | - | - | - | Atta-ur-Rehman et al. [4] |
6% of the binder weight | 15% higher than the control specimen. | −15.10% | - | - | - | - | ||||
mSiO2/TiO2 | Mixing technique | 3 wt% | 40 mm × 40 mm × 160 mm | 15% higher than the control specimen. | Slightly higher than the control sample. | - | - | - | - | Sikora et al. [13] |
Material | Application Process | Quantity | Efficiency | Environmental Conditions | Observations | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anatase I | Mixing technique | 10% by weight | 44.1 mg × h−1 × m−2 | Flow rate 1.0 L × min−1; UV-A radiation 10 ± 2 W × m−2, relative atmospheric humidity 50 ± 5% and pollutant concentration (NOx) 20 ppmv. | The efficiency is in terms of removal of NOx. | Victor et al. [29] |
Anatase II | 11.71 mg × h−1 × m−2 | |||||
Rutile | 37.24 mg × h−1 × m−2 | |||||
Nano-TiO2–SiO2 | Dip coating | - | 87% of MG, 80% MB and 65% MO | UV irradiation, room temperature. | The photocatalytic material was added to WPC blocks. The efficiency is in terms of percent of decomposition of dyes. | Hoda Jafari et al. [35] |
P25 (75% anatase and 25%rutile) | Mixing technique | 2% by weight of binders | NOx removal rate: 28 μmol m−2 × h−1. NOx removal ratio: 5.8% | 24 h UV-A irradiation. | The TiO2 was incorporated in self-compacting glass mortar (SCGM). WPC and metakaolin were used as cementitious materials. | M.-Z. Guo et al. [36] |
Nano-TiO2 | Dip coating and vacuum saturation | TiO2 ethanol suspension of 0.05 g × mL−1 | Toluene removal efficiency: 95 % elimination rate: 60–70 mg × m−2 × h−1 | 24 °C, 52% relative humidity. | Initial toluene concentration: 15 ppmv gas residence time: 3 min. | A. Maury-Ramirez et al. [37] |
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Castro-Hoyos, A.M.; Rojas Manzano, M.A.; Maury-Ramírez, A. Challenges and Opportunities of Using Titanium Dioxide Photocatalysis on Cement-Based Materials. Coatings 2022, 12, 968. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings12070968
Castro-Hoyos AM, Rojas Manzano MA, Maury-Ramírez A. Challenges and Opportunities of Using Titanium Dioxide Photocatalysis on Cement-Based Materials. Coatings. 2022; 12(7):968. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings12070968
Chicago/Turabian StyleCastro-Hoyos, Angélica María, Manuel Alejandro Rojas Manzano, and Aníbal Maury-Ramírez. 2022. "Challenges and Opportunities of Using Titanium Dioxide Photocatalysis on Cement-Based Materials" Coatings 12, no. 7: 968. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings12070968
APA StyleCastro-Hoyos, A. M., Rojas Manzano, M. A., & Maury-Ramírez, A. (2022). Challenges and Opportunities of Using Titanium Dioxide Photocatalysis on Cement-Based Materials. Coatings, 12(7), 968. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings12070968