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Boosted persulfate activation by hierarchically porous carbonaceous materials: Pivotal role of pore structure and electron-accepting capacity.

Authors :
Tang, Xiaodan
Ma, Shuanglong
Xu, Shengjun
Pei, Chenhao
Dong, Tingting
Yang, Qiuyun
Huang, Yan
Wang, Jingzhen
Gao, Boqiang
Hua, Dangling
Dang, Bingjun
Zhan, Sihui
Source :
Chemical Engineering Journal. Sep2023, Vol. 471, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

[Display omitted] • Porous carbonaceous material (CMs) were fabricated via various porogenic agents. • The increase in total pore volume of CMs facilitated the catalytic process. • Defect category in carbon skeleton induced by porogenic action was revealed. • Reactive complexes were the foremost active species for catalytic oxidation. • The inner-sphere interaction between CMs and peroxydisulfate was inferred. Porous carbonaceous materials (CMs) have been praised as superior candidates in activating persulfate for antibiotic wastewater decontamination. Whereas, as one of the frequently reported nonradical pathways, the formation mechanism of the reactive complexes and their correlation with physicochemical properties of CMs have not been comprehensively unveiled. Herein, a series of carbonaceous materials (CMs) with different specific surface area (SSA) and defect structures were fabricated by using KCl, MgCl 2 , KHCO 3 and K 2 C 2 O 4 as porogenic agents to activate peroxydisulfate (PDS) for sulfadiazine (SDZ) degradation. Results showed that the total pore volume of CMs exhibited a good linearity with degradation rate, attributing to the combined effect of SSA, defect degree and oxygen-containing functional groups according to multiple regression model. The reactive complexes (CM/PDS*) were proved as the foremost active species for SDZ oxidation via a suite of solid evidences. Compared with that after PS addition, the current direction was reversed after SDZ addition in i-t curves shedding light on the sharp enhanced potential of CM/PDS* and much low potential of SDZ. Furthermore, the inner-sphere CM/PDS* originating from the formation of new covalent bonds between CMs and PDS was inferred due to the poor dependence between electron-donating capacity and SDZ degradation result. The CM/PDS* with considerably higher potential can extract electron from SDZ based on the excellent positive relationship between electron-accepting capacity of CMs and SDZ degradation effect. This study advances the mechanistic comprehension of nonradical PDS activation, and provides a multiple regression model to predict degradation effects of carbon materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13858947
Volume :
471
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemical Engineering Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169790044
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2023.144765