Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49933
Título: Photocatalytic degradation of estradiol under simulated solar light and assessment of estrogenic activity
Autores/as: Mboula, V. Maroga
Héquet, V.
Andrès, Y.
Gru, Y.
Colin, R.
Doña-Rodríguez, J. M. 
Pastrana-Martínez, L. M.
Silva, A. M.T.
Leleu, M.
Tindall, A. J.
Mateos, S.
Falaras, P.
Clasificación UNESCO: 221001 Catálisis
Palabras clave: Water treatment
Photocatalysis
Simulated solar ligh
Estrogen
Reaction pathway
Fecha de publicación: 2015
Editor/a: 0926-3373
Proyectos: Water Detoxification Using Innovative vi-Nanocatalysts 
Publicación seriada: Applied Catalysis B: Environmental 
Resumen: The ability of nanostructured titanium materials developed in the FP7/EU collaborative Clean Water project to photocatalytically degrade pollutants was tested, using 17β-estradiol (E2) as the model compound. The photocatalytic degradation of E2 was carried out under simulated solar light (both the UV part (280–400 nm) and full spectrum (200 nm–30 μm)). The efficiency of the process was assessed using several indicators including the conversion yield, the mineralization yield, the formation of by-products and their endocrine disrupting effects. The newly synthesized catalysts significantly degraded E2 and their efficiency was found to depend on the irradiation wavelength range. Some of the intermediates formed during the photocatalytic treatment with ECT-1023t and Evonik P25 were identified and their estrogenic effect was evaluated in vivo using the ChgH-GFP transgenic medaka line. This analysis confirmed that in the structure of the identified by-products, the phenol group is not destroyed and that the estrogenic effect is still present in the corresponding solution. The persistence of the estrogenic effect after the photocatalytic treatment is hypothesized to be due to the presence of the phenol group in the by-products.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49933
ISSN: 0926-3373
DOI: 10.1016/j.apcatb.2014.05.026
Fuente: Applied Catalysis B: Environmental [ISSN 0926-3373], v. 162, p. 437-444
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