# Visible Light Active Natural Rutile Photocatalyst Obtained via Nano Milling

**Authors:** Kata Saszet, Enikő Eszter Almási, Ádám Rácz, Katalin Bohács, Milica Todea, Klára Hernádi, Zsolt Pap, Lucian Baia

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/molecules30071600 · Molecules · 2025-04-03

## TL;DR

Nano milling natural rutile creates a visible light photocatalyst that can degrade pollutants like phenol and ibuprofen without harsh chemicals.

## Contribution

Nano milling natural rutile enables visible light photocatalysis without chemical treatment, offering a cost-effective and eco-friendly alternative.

## Key findings

- Nano milled rutile achieved 33% degradation of phenol and ibuprofen under visible light after 22 hours.
- Particle size and impurity doping affect the band gap and photocatalytic activity of rutile.
- Natural rutile can function as an environmentally friendly photocatalyst without synthetic processing.

## Abstract

Natural rutile is a widely available titanium mineral which shows great potential as a photocatalyst for environmental remediation when processed correctly. Industries invest large sums in the transformation of the rutile mineral into pure, synthetic nano titania. Still, the present study proves that bare natural rutile with trace element content can also be applied as a photocatalyst, without harsh chemical interventions, simply by processing via nano grinding. Samples with different mean primary particle size values were obtained by wet stirred media milling, their compositional and structural properties were investigated, and their photocatalytic properties were evaluated under both visible- and UV-light illumination for the degradation of phenol and ibuprofen. By changing the grain size and the particle size distribution, and due to the doping effect of impurities present in the mineral, the band gap values of the samples and their photocatalytic activities changed as well. The nano milled rutile exhibited visible light photocatalytic activity, with a 33% degradation efficiency in the case of both phenol and ibuprofen, after 22 h of irradiation. The present study not only highlights the photocatalytic degradation of a pharmaceutical by natural rutile mineral, but its findings also suggest that ground nano rutile can function as an environmentally friendly photocatalyst, as it not only avoids the use of harmful chemicals typically employed in TiO2 synthesis but also offers a simpler, more cost-effective alternative for producing photocatalytic materials.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** phenol (PubChem CID 996), ibuprofen (PubChem CID 3672)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** ibuprofen (MESH:D007052), titanium (MESH:D014025), phenol (MESH:D019800), Rutile (MESH:C009495)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

124 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11990522/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11990522