Tungsten oxide: a catalyst worth studying for the abatement and decontamination of chemical warfare agents
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2017
abstract:
Tungsten(VI) oxide, WO3, was studied and used as a heterogeneous catalyst for the liquid-phase
oxidative abatement and solid-phase decontamination of simulants of chemical warfare agents,
CWAs. The catalytic performance of WO3 was compared to the one of a soluble W-containing
model catalyst, W(IV)-heptaisobutyl polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane, W-POSS. In liquid-phase
abatement tests, WO3 promoted a complete degradation of the toxic agent simulant within 24 h, in
the presence of aqueous hydrogen peroxide, at room temperature. In solid-phase decontamination
tests, when WO3 was mixed with sodium perborate as a solid oxidant, it was also tested in the
decontamination of a cotton textile support from organosulfide and organophosphonate agents
(simulants of blistering and nerve CWAs, respectively), showing promising performances comparable
to, or sometimes better than, a nanostructured TiO2 catalyst, taken as a reference material. The
environmental impact of the WO3 catalyst was assessed on bioluminescent Photobacterium
leiognathi Sh1 bacteria, over which no acute nor chronic detrimental effects were recorded. Then,
when in contact with a vegetable species such as Phaseolus vulgaris L. (common bean), WO3 did not
cause damage to the photosynthetic apparatus of the plant, whereas a clear inhibition of the seed
germination was evidenced.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Tungsten oxide; heterogeneous catalysis; chemical warfare agents; decontamination; environmental toxicity tests; luminescent bacteria
List of contributors: