Sol-Gel ceramic glazes with photocatalytic activity.
Guillermo MonrósM LlusarJ BadenesR GalindoPublished in: Journal of sol-gel science and technology (2022)
A frit is a glassy ceramic composition that has been fused, quenched, and granulated. A single frit or a mixture of frits and ceramic materials forms a ceramic glaze. The purpose of this pre-fusion is to render any soluble and/or toxic components insoluble by rendering it inert in a glassy composition with silica and other added oxides. The ceramic glaze dispersed in water (ceramic slip) is deposited on a ceramic body and fired for waterproofing and aesthetic purposes. Multicomponent frits (zinc-potassium borosilicate system) with similar behavior to conventional ceramic frits for single-firing ceramic glazes ("monoporosa" glazes fired at 1080 °C) were prepared by Sol-Gel methods (monophasic and polyphasic gels) avoiding the pre-fusion and characterized as photocatalytic agents (showing high degradation activity on Orange II). The effect of doping with bandgap modifiers (V 2 O 5 , Sb 2 O 5 and SnO 2 ) and also with devitrification agents (ZrO 2 to crystallize zircon, Al 2 O 3 to anorthite, Mo 2 O 3 to powellite and ZnO to gahnite ZnAl 2 O 4 ) were analyzed. Multicomponent frits (zinc-potassium borosilicate system) with similar behavior to conventional ceramic frits for single-firing glazes (1080 °C) prepared by Sol-Gel methods (monophasic and polyphasic gels), without pre-fusion, shows photocatalytic activity.