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6277934 
Journal Article 
Heterogeneous photocatalytic oxidation of gas-phase organics for air purification: Acetone, 1-butanol, butyraldehyde, formaldehyde, and m-xylene oxidation 
Ollis, DF; Peral, J 
1992 
Yes 
Journal of Catalysis
ISSN: 0021-9517
EISSN: 1090-2694 
Photocatalyzed degradations of trace levels of various oxygenates and an aromatic in air were carried out using near-UV-illuminated titanium dioxide (anatase) powder. The initial rates of degradation for acetone, 1-butanol, formaldehyde, and m-xylene were well described by Langmuir-Hinshelwood rate forms. No reaction intermediates were detected for acetone oxidation at conversions of 5–20%. Butyraldehyde was the main product of 1-butanol oxidation for conversions of 20–30%. The influence of 5% water (simulating partial humidification) in the feedstream varied strongly: water vapor inhibited acetone oxidation, but had no influence on the 1-butanol conversion rate. m-Xylene conversion was enhanced by trace water addition, but inhibited at higher water levels. Some catalyst deactivation was detected between 1-butanol runs; the activity could be easily recovered by illuminating the catalyst in fresh air. Formaldehyde was also successfully oxidized. These results, taken together with earlier literature citations for photocatalyzed total oxidation of methane, ethane, trichloroethylene (but see (27)), toluene, and a very recent report for oxidation of odor compounds, indicate a favorable technical potential for photocatalyzed treatment of air in order to degrade and remove all major classes of oxidizable air contaminants.