Gil Bravo, Antonio

Loading...
Profile Picture

Email Address

Birth Date

Job Title

Last Name

Gil Bravo

First Name

Antonio

person.page.departamento

Ciencias

person.page.instituteName

InaMat2. Instituto de Investigación en Materiales Avanzados y Matemáticas

person.page.observainves

person.page.upna

Name

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Titania-triethanolamine-kaolinite nanocomposites as adsorbents and photocatalysts of herbicides
    (Elsevier, 2021) Ferreira, Ana Vera de Toledo Piza Figueiredo; Barbosa, Lorrana Vietro; Souza, Suelen Delfino de; Ciuffi, Katia J.; Vicente, Miguel Ángel; Trujillano, Raquel; Korili, Sophia A.; Gil Bravo, Antonio; Faria, Emerson H. de; Zientziak; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Ciencias
    Kaolinite-titania adsorbents/photocatalysts were prepared by functionalizing a kaolinite with titanium(IV) triethanolaminate isopropoxide by the sol–gel route. These materials were characterized by various techniques and applied in adsorption studies (kinetic and equilibrium) of the herbicides diuron, hexazinone, and tebuthiuron. Photodegradation studies were also conducted with the materials submitted to heat-treatment at 400, 700, or 1000 °C. The basal spacing increased from 0.71 to 1.08 nm when pure kaolinite was functionalized with titanium triethanolaminate units. The materials displayed FTIR bands of –CH, –NH2, and Ti–OH groups, thereby confirming that titanium alkoxide was present in the kaolinite interlayer space. The pseudo second-order model was the best for describing the kinetic adsorption process. In the equilibrium study, the Langmuir model best described the adsorption mechanism. The photodegradation studies showed that the kaolinite-titania nanocomposites heat-treated at 400 and 700 degraded diuron, hexazinone, and tebuthiuron efficiently due to the presence of metakaolin and formation of the anatase phase. © 2021 Elsevier B.V.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Multifunctional heterogeneous catalysts: Tetrakis (pentafluorophenyl)porphinato]iron(III) immobilized on amine-functionalized Diatomaceous Earth for catalytic and adsorption applications
    (Elsevier, 2023) Do Prado, Marcus Vinicius; González, Beatriz; Vicente, Miguel Ángel; Trujillano, Raquel; Nassar, Eduardo José; Gil Bravo, Antonio; Santamaría Arana, Leticia; Korili, Sophia A.; Marçal, Liziane; Faria, Emerson H. de; Ciuffi, Katia J.; Ciencias; Zientziak; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa
    The use of Diatomaceous Earth (DE) as a promising support of a synthetic metalloporphyrin is reported, trying to heterogenize metalloporphyrin catalysts to mimicking enzyme site isolation and improving reaction selectivity. New multifunctional hybrid materials consisting of DE amino–functionalized with aminopropyltriethoxysilane (DE–APTES), followed by grafting with [meso–tetrakis(pentafluorophenyl)porphinato]iron(III) (DE–APTES–FeTFPP), were prepared and fully characterized. FeTFPP was grafted into DE–APTES via the amine groups (band at 1570 cm–1 ). The brown color of the materials indicated that FeTFPP was immobilized in the matrix; a Soret band characteristic of ironporphyrin located in a confined space, was found at 416 nm. Leaching studies confirmed that the ironporphyrin was entrapped and not just adsorbed on the silica surface. DE was composed of typical quartz and cristobalite crystalline phases and amorphous silica. The intensity of its characteristic reflection at 22◦ (2θ) decreased in the presence of FeTFPP, evidencing that the ironporphyrin influenced the organization of the material. Catalytic tests using DE–APTES–FeTFPP in cyclooctene epoxidation to cyclooctene oxide (56 % yield, with complete selectivity for the epoxide) and cyclohexane oxidation (4 % yield of oxidized products, with ketone/alcohol selectivity ~ 3:1), evidenced the versatility of the catalyst and the multifunctionality of the resulting hybrid materials and the ability of DE as a promising natural support for ironporphyrin catalysts. Finally, the capacity of the materials as CO2 adsorbents was evaluated in the temperature range 100–200 ◦C. DE–APTES showed a maximum adsorption capacity of 1.26 mmol/g at 100 ◦C, 18 times higher than the value found under the same conditions for the non–functionalized support.