Assessing the life cycle environmental impacts of titania nanoparticle production by continuous flow solvo/hydrothermal synthesis

Continuous-flow hydrothermal and solvothermal syntheses offer substantial advantages over conventional processes, producing high quality materials from a wide range of precursors. In this study, we evaluate the “cradle-to-gate” life cycle environmental impacts of alternative titanium dioxide (TiO₂)...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Caramazana-Gonzalez, P., Dunne, Peter W., Gimeno-Fabra, Miquel, Zilka, Miroslav, Ticha, M., Stieberova, B., Freiberg, F., McKechnie, Jon, Lester, Edward
Format: Article
Published: Royal Society of Chemistry 2017
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40260/
_version_ 1848796019486097408
author Caramazana-Gonzalez, P.
Dunne, Peter W.
Gimeno-Fabra, Miquel
Zilka, Miroslav
Ticha, M.
Stieberova, B.
Freiberg, F.
McKechnie, Jon
Lester, Edward
author_facet Caramazana-Gonzalez, P.
Dunne, Peter W.
Gimeno-Fabra, Miquel
Zilka, Miroslav
Ticha, M.
Stieberova, B.
Freiberg, F.
McKechnie, Jon
Lester, Edward
author_sort Caramazana-Gonzalez, P.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Continuous-flow hydrothermal and solvothermal syntheses offer substantial advantages over conventional processes, producing high quality materials from a wide range of precursors. In this study, we evaluate the “cradle-to-gate” life cycle environmental impacts of alternative titanium dioxide (TiO₂) nanoparticle production parameters, considering a range of operational conditions, precursors, material properties and production capacities. A detailed characterisation of the nano-TiO₂ products allows us, for the first time, to link key nanoparticle characteristics to production parameters and environmental impacts, providing a useful foundation for future studies evaluating nano-TiO₂ applications. Five different titanium precursors are considered, ranging from simple inorganic precursors, like titanium oxysulphate (TiOS), to complex organic precursors such as titanium bis(ammonium-lactato)dihydroxide (TiBALD). Synthesis at the laboratory scale is used to determine the yield, size distribution, crystallinity and phase of the nanoparticles. The specifications and operating experience of a full scale plant (>1000 t per year) are used to estimate the mass and energy inputs of industrial scale production for the life cycle assessment. Overall, higher process temperatures are linked to larger, more crystalline nanoparticles and higher conversion rates. Precursor selection also influences nano-TiO₂ properties: production from TiOS results in the largest particle sizes, while TiBALD achieves the smallest particles and narrowest size distribution. Precursor selection is the main factor in determining cradle-to-gate environmental impacts (>80% in some cases), due to the production impact of complex organic precursors. Nano-TiO2 production from TiOS shows the lowest global warming potential (GWP) (<12 kg CO₂-eq. per kg TiO₂) and cumulative energy demand (CED) (<149 MJ kg¯¹ TiO₂) due to the low environmental impact of the precursor, the use of water as a solvent and its high yield even at lower temperatures. Conversely, the TiBALD precursor shows the highest impact (86 kg CO₂-eq. per kg TiO₂ and 1952 MJ kg¯¹ TiO₂) due to the need for additional post-synthesis steps and complexity of precursor manufacturing. The main purpose of this study is not a direct comparison of the environmental impacts of TiO₂ nanoparticles manufactured utilizing various precursors under different conditions, but to provide an essential foundation for future work evaluating potential applications of nano-TiO₂ and their life cycle environmental impacts.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T19:41:19Z
format Article
id nottingham-40260
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:41:19Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Royal Society of Chemistry
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-402602024-08-15T15:21:21Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40260/ Assessing the life cycle environmental impacts of titania nanoparticle production by continuous flow solvo/hydrothermal synthesis Caramazana-Gonzalez, P. Dunne, Peter W. Gimeno-Fabra, Miquel Zilka, Miroslav Ticha, M. Stieberova, B. Freiberg, F. McKechnie, Jon Lester, Edward Continuous-flow hydrothermal and solvothermal syntheses offer substantial advantages over conventional processes, producing high quality materials from a wide range of precursors. In this study, we evaluate the “cradle-to-gate” life cycle environmental impacts of alternative titanium dioxide (TiO₂) nanoparticle production parameters, considering a range of operational conditions, precursors, material properties and production capacities. A detailed characterisation of the nano-TiO₂ products allows us, for the first time, to link key nanoparticle characteristics to production parameters and environmental impacts, providing a useful foundation for future studies evaluating nano-TiO₂ applications. Five different titanium precursors are considered, ranging from simple inorganic precursors, like titanium oxysulphate (TiOS), to complex organic precursors such as titanium bis(ammonium-lactato)dihydroxide (TiBALD). Synthesis at the laboratory scale is used to determine the yield, size distribution, crystallinity and phase of the nanoparticles. The specifications and operating experience of a full scale plant (>1000 t per year) are used to estimate the mass and energy inputs of industrial scale production for the life cycle assessment. Overall, higher process temperatures are linked to larger, more crystalline nanoparticles and higher conversion rates. Precursor selection also influences nano-TiO₂ properties: production from TiOS results in the largest particle sizes, while TiBALD achieves the smallest particles and narrowest size distribution. Precursor selection is the main factor in determining cradle-to-gate environmental impacts (>80% in some cases), due to the production impact of complex organic precursors. Nano-TiO2 production from TiOS shows the lowest global warming potential (GWP) (<12 kg CO₂-eq. per kg TiO₂) and cumulative energy demand (CED) (<149 MJ kg¯¹ TiO₂) due to the low environmental impact of the precursor, the use of water as a solvent and its high yield even at lower temperatures. Conversely, the TiBALD precursor shows the highest impact (86 kg CO₂-eq. per kg TiO₂ and 1952 MJ kg¯¹ TiO₂) due to the need for additional post-synthesis steps and complexity of precursor manufacturing. The main purpose of this study is not a direct comparison of the environmental impacts of TiO₂ nanoparticles manufactured utilizing various precursors under different conditions, but to provide an essential foundation for future work evaluating potential applications of nano-TiO₂ and their life cycle environmental impacts. Royal Society of Chemistry 2017-02-01 Article PeerReviewed Caramazana-Gonzalez, P., Dunne, Peter W., Gimeno-Fabra, Miquel, Zilka, Miroslav, Ticha, M., Stieberova, B., Freiberg, F., McKechnie, Jon and Lester, Edward (2017) Assessing the life cycle environmental impacts of titania nanoparticle production by continuous flow solvo/hydrothermal synthesis. Green Chemistry, 19 . pp. 1536-1547. ISSN 1463-9262 http://pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/ArticleLanding/2017/GC/C6GC03357A#!divAbstract doi:10.1039/C6GC03357A doi:10.1039/C6GC03357A
spellingShingle Caramazana-Gonzalez, P.
Dunne, Peter W.
Gimeno-Fabra, Miquel
Zilka, Miroslav
Ticha, M.
Stieberova, B.
Freiberg, F.
McKechnie, Jon
Lester, Edward
Assessing the life cycle environmental impacts of titania nanoparticle production by continuous flow solvo/hydrothermal synthesis
title Assessing the life cycle environmental impacts of titania nanoparticle production by continuous flow solvo/hydrothermal synthesis
title_full Assessing the life cycle environmental impacts of titania nanoparticle production by continuous flow solvo/hydrothermal synthesis
title_fullStr Assessing the life cycle environmental impacts of titania nanoparticle production by continuous flow solvo/hydrothermal synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the life cycle environmental impacts of titania nanoparticle production by continuous flow solvo/hydrothermal synthesis
title_short Assessing the life cycle environmental impacts of titania nanoparticle production by continuous flow solvo/hydrothermal synthesis
title_sort assessing the life cycle environmental impacts of titania nanoparticle production by continuous flow solvo/hydrothermal synthesis
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40260/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40260/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40260/