Subscriber access provided by UCL Library Services
Article
Accelerated catalytic Fenton reaction with traces of iron – An Fe-Pd-multicatalysis approach Anett Georgi, Miriam Velasco Polo, Klara Crincoli, Katrin Mackenzie, and Frank-Dieter Kopinke Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b01049 • Publication Date (Web): 11 May 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 26, 2016
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 23
Environmental Science & Technology
1
Accelerated catalytic Fenton reaction with traces of iron – An Fe-Pd-multicatalysis
2
approach
3
Anett Georgi*, Miriam Velasco Polo, Klara Crincoli, Katrin Mackenzie and Frank-Dieter Kopinke
4
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Department of Environmental
5
Engineering, Permoserstr. 15, D-04318 Leipzig, Germany
6 7
Abstract
8
An accelerated catalytic Fenton (ACF) reaction was developed based upon a multicatalysis
9
approach, facilitating efficient contaminant oxidation at trace levels of dissolved iron. Beside
10
the FeII/H2O2 catalyst/oxidant pair for production of OH-radicals, the ACF system contains
11
Pd/H2 as catalyst/reductant pair for fast reduction of FeIII back to FeII which accelerates the
12
Fenton cycle and leads to faster contaminant degradation. By this means, the concentration of
13
the dissolved iron catalyst can be reduced to trace levels (1 mg L-1) below common discharge
14
limits, thus eliminating the need for iron sludge removal, which is one of the major drawbacks
15
of conventional Fenton processes. ACF provides fast degradation of the model contaminant
16
methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE, C0 = 0.17 mM) with a half-life of 11 min with 1 mg L-1 dissolved
17
iron, 500 mg L-1 H2O2, 5 mg L-1 Pd (as suspended Pd/Al2O3 catalyst) and 0.1 MPa H2, pH = 3. The
18
effects of pH, H2 partial pressure and H2O2 concentration on MTBE degradation rates were
19
studied. Results on kinetic deuterium isotope effect and quenching studies are in conformity
20
with OH-radicals as main oxidant. The heterogeneous Pd/Al2O3 catalyst was reused within 6
21
cycles without significant loss in activity.
22
TOC art
Heterogeneous catalyst/reductant
Homogeneous
+ catalyst/oxidant
= Multicatalysis for ACF
23 24
1. Introduction
25
Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) are an indispensable tool for removing toxic, hardly
26
biodegradable and recalcitrant organic contaminants from water. The Fenton reaction (Eq. 1) 1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 2 of 23
27
allows the OH-radical, one of the most powerful oxidants (E◦ = 2.73 V, pH = 3), to be produced
28
at ambient conditions from iron salts and H2O2. These reagents are inexpensive, relatively easy
29
to store and handle, and environmentally benign.
30
However, the homogeneous Fenton reaction with dissolved iron as catalyst also has various
31
disadvantages, mainly related to iron speciation. The formation of Fe(III) oxyhydroxides during
32
the reaction must be prevented by means of acidification of the incoming water (optimal pH
33
around 3)1. After the final neutralization of the treated water, iron sludge is inevitably
34
produced and must be disposed of. Heterogeneous Fenton-like catalysts offer improved
35
properties for catalyst recycling. However, at the same time they often suffer from disadvan-
36
tages such as relatively low catalytic activity and utilization efficiency of H2O2, as reported for
37
iron oxides2-4, or insufficient stability and leaching of metal ions.5 Furthermore, catalysts with
38
iron on microporous supports such as zeolites suffer steric limitations for the access of large
39
pollutant molecules.6
40
In order to at least reduce the amount of iron sludge, the so-called catalytic Fenton or Fenton-
41
like reaction is used, whereby FeII or FeIII salts are applied in sub-stoichiometric, i.e. catalytic
42
amounts (typically in the range of 10–100 mg L-1 1,7) related to the amount of H2O2. After the
43
initial fast consumption of the FeII added, the slow reduction of FeIII back to FeII by reaction
44
with H2O2 (Eq. 2) or HO2●/O2●− (Eq. 3) is the rate-limiting step in these systems. Despite the
45
comparably high rate constant of the latter reaction, its contribution is limited by the low
46
stationary concentration of the transient radicals. Further important reactions of the complex
47
Fenton chemistry together with their second-order rate constants at pH = 3 are listed below:8
48
FeII + H2O2 → FeIII + ●OH + OH−
k = 63 M-1 s-1
Eq. 1
49
FeIII + H2O2 → FeII + HO2● + H+
k = 2.0 × 10−3
Eq. 2
50
FeIII + HO2●/O2●− → FeII + O2 + (1 or 0) H+
k = 7.8 × 105
Eq. 3
51
H2O2 + ●OH → HO2● + H2O
k = 3.3 × 107
Eq. 4
52
FeII + ●OH → FeIII + OH−
k = 3.2 × 108
Eq. 5
53
FeII + HO2●/O2●− + (1 or 2) H+ → FeIII + H2O2
k = 1.3 × 106
Eq. 6
54
For simplification, the terms FeIII and FeII are used in the following sections for all iron species
55
of these oxidation states present in aqueous solution, irrespective of their ligands. It has been
56
suggested that the reaction between FeIII and H2O2 described by the net reaction in Eq. 2
57
proceeds via an initial complex formation (Fe3+ + H2O2 ⇋ Fe(HO2)2+ + H+) and subsequent
58
reductive dissociation of the FeIII-peroxide complex (Fe(HO2)2+ → Fe2+ + HO2●,1 as described in
59
further detail in the Supporting Information (SI, part S2).
2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 3 of 23
Environmental Science & Technology
60
The reduction of FeIII can be enhanced by applying UV light (photo-Fenton9,10), electrical
61
potential at suitable electrodes (electro-Fenton11) or additional chemical reductants or redox
62
mediators (for references see below). However, photo-Fenton processes require the
63
availability of intense solar irradiation or energy-consuming UV lamp irradiation. For electro-
64
Fenton processes, achieving high space-time yields is a challenge which limits their applicability
65
for large water volumes. The addition of suitable reducing agents or redox mediators to
66
enhance FeIII/FeII recycling thus offers an interesting alternative. Optimal reagents should
67
significantly increase the rate of FeIII reduction without leaving undesired residues in the
68
treated water and, in addition, have at most a minor impact as parasitic consumers of the
69
reactive oxidant species produced.
70
In previous studies, humic acid12 and quinones13 have been suggested as redox mediators
71
which create an intermediate electron-shuttling cycle between FeIII as final electron acceptor
72
and H2O2 as electron donor. In addition, hydroxylamine14 and ascorbic acid15 have been applied
73
in excess to FeIII in order to provide a stronger reducing agent in addition to H2O2. All these
74
compounds, however, are themselves attacked by ●OH and thus consumed during the
75
reaction. Even more important is that their addition may lead to residual degradation
76
products, such as increased levels of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the case of incomplete
77
mineralization of organic mediators, or nitrate in the case of hydroxylamines.14
78
H2 in comparison is a clean reductant, leaving only water as product. In addition, its reactivity
79
towards ●OH is relatively low (k•OH,H2 = (3.4–6.0) x 107 M-1 s-1).16 Dissolved H2 is, however,
80
inactive for reduction of dissolved FeIII to FeII at ambient conditions. Taking into account the
81
dominant iron species at pH = 3 ([Fe(H2O)5(OH)]2+)17, this reaction (Eq. 7) is thermodynamically
82
favorable (∆ < 0), but obviously kinetically limited due to high activation energy barriers. 1 [Fe H O) OH)] + H → [Fe H O) ] 2
∆ = −87 kJ mol"#
Eq. 7
83
Typically, noble metal catalysts such as Pd are used in order to activate H2 and the combined
84
application of H2 and Pd catalysts proved successful for water treatment by reductive
85
transformation of contaminants even at large scale.18 Thus, we hypothesize that activated
86
hydrogen formed on noble metal catalysts such as Pd can be utilized to reduce dissolved FeIII to
87
FeII (Eqs. 8 and 9). 2 Pd + H → 2 Pd ∙ H
Eq. 8
Pd ∙ H + Fe''' → Pd + H + Fe''
Eq. 9
88
Pd has also been shown to catalyze the formation of H2O2 from O2 and H2 (Eq. 11).19 Yuan et al.
89
have designed a process whereby: I) O2 and H2 are produced by H2O electrolysis, II) H2O2 is
90
produced from these gases on Pd catalysts, and III) dissolved iron is responsible for production 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 4 of 23
91
of ●OH from H2O2.20,21 For example, Rhodamine B oxidation by this process was performed
92
with 50 mg L-1 dissolved iron.20 The involvement of the Pd catalyst in the reduction of dissolved
93
FeIII was not considered in these papers. Although Pd was suggested to catalyze, to some
94
extent, the formation of ●OH from H2O2 (Eq. 11), its efficiency for this reaction is low.20,22 Since
95
Pd also catalyzes the decomposition (Eq. 12) and hydrogenation of H2O2 (Eq. 13) as well as H2
96
combustion (Eq. 14), the selectivity for H2O2 formation is limited. Consequently, accumulated
97
H2O2 concentrations obtained in the studies cited above were rather low (< 20 mg L-1 in 40
98
min).20,21 In addition, activated hydrogen can also act as a consumer of ●OH, formed from H2O2
99
e.g. in a Fenton reaction in the solution phase (Eq. 15). ()
H + O *+ H O
Eq. 10
()
H O *+ 2 ●OH
Eq. 11
() 1 H O *+ H O + O 2
Eq. 12
()
H O + H *+ 2 H O
Eq. 13
1 () H + O *+ H O 2
Eq. 14
Pd ∙ H + ●OH → Pd + H O
Eq. 15
100
In another setup applied for in situ formation of H2O2 and Fenton oxidation, the Pd catalyst
101
was supported on magnetite.23 Considerable amounts of dissolved iron were produced under
102
the applied acidic conditions (pH ≤ 3, CFe,dissolved ≥ 10 mg L-1 within 60 min corresponding to ≈
103
95% phenol degradation). This was ascribed to reductive dissolution of magnetite by the Pd-
104
catalyzed formation of activated hydrogen.23 Electrochemical production of Fe2+ by an iron
105
cathode allowed better control of dissolved iron concentration by adjusting the current
106
applied to the cathode resulting in 91% MTBE turnover (k’ = 0.04 min-1, C0,MTBE = 20 mg L-1)
107
within 60 min with simultaneous production of 14 mg L-1 dissolved iron.24
108
In contrast to the cited literature studies, the aim of the present study was to design an
109
accelerated catalytic Fenton (ACF) reaction with minimal concentrations of dissolved iron, thus
110
eliminating the need for sludge removal as a post-treatment step of the Fenton oxidation. In
111
most countries, discharge limits for total iron are in the range of 0.5 to 2 mg L-1.25 Thus, the
112
ACF system was intended to work at these low Fe concentrations. The suggested process relies
113
on the acceleration of FeIII/FeII recycling by introducing H2 as reductant and supported Pd as a
114
second catalyst. A pre-requisite for this concept is the reduction of dissolved FeIII by activated
115
hydrogen at the Pd surface even in the presence of H2O2: a process which, to the best of our
116
knowledge, has not previously been experimentally proven. If existent, this process should also
117
be relevant for Fenton systems with in situ H2O2 formation, since they contain all required 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 5 of 23
Environmental Science & Technology
118
components (i.e. Pd, H2 and dissolved FeIII), even though catalytic reduction of FeIII to FeII at the
119
Pd surface has not yet been considered in mechanistic schemes of such studies.20,21,26,27
120
Methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) was applied as model contaminant, due to its relevance as
121
groundwater contaminant together with its inertness regarding losses by processes other than
122
radical-driven oxidation (i.e. low volatilization and sorption tendency, inertness towards
123
reduction). MTBE has a moderate reactivity towards ●OH (k•OH,MTBE = 1.6 x 109 M-1 s-1).16 H2 and
124
H2O2 were added externally.
125 126
2. Materials and Methods 2.1. Chemicals and Materials
127
MTBE, tert-butyl formate (TBF), tert-butyl alcohol (TBA), FeSO4•7H2O, Na2SO3 and acetone, all
128
in high purity (≥ 98%), as well as H2O2 (30 wt-%) were obtained from Merck, Germany. MTBE-
129
d12 with 99 atom-% deuterium was obtained from Sigma, Germany and TiOSO4 solution (1.9–
130
2.1 wt-%) from Fluka, Germany.
131
As Pd catalyst, the sieve fraction 63–125 µm of the crushed G-133D Pd on ɣ-Al2O3 egg-shell
132
catalyst with 0.5 wt-% Pd from Commercia, Germany, was used. The catalyst has a BET surface
133
area of about 160 m2 g-1 and a Pd dispersion of about 20%.
134
2.2 Procedure of oxidation experiments
135
The reactions were carried out in 150 mL Erlenmeyer flasks equipped with Mininert® valves.
136
For ACF experiments, a defined amount of catalyst (50 mg catalyst, corresponding to 5 mg L-1
137
Pd) was suspended in 50 mL aqueous solution (pH = 3 adjusted with HNO3) containing the
138
required amount of FeII (18–36 µM), which was added from a freshly prepared stock solution
139
of FeSO4. Where not otherwise stated, the solution was purged with H2 or H2/N2 gas mixtures
140
for 10 min in order to fill the headspace of the reaction vessel with an appropriate H2 reservoir
141
(3.3 mmol in case of pure H2 atmosphere) and to equilibrate it with the aqueous reaction
142
suspension. After that the vessel was closed and the desired concentration of MTBE was added
143
from an aqueous stock solution. For reasons of comparison, a set of blank experiments was
144
conducted analogously without addition of one of the catalysts (Pd or Fe) or with various gas
145
compositions (H2/N2 and H2/O2 mixtures or air). For experiments on the kinetic isotope effect
146
of MTBE oxidation, MTBE-d0 and -d12 were applied in equimolar amounts in one and the same
147
reaction batch. In all cases, the reaction was started by adding H2O2. In some experiments H2O2
148
was re-dosed at certain time intervals as indicated. If mentioned (only for experiments with
149
Cgas,H2 ≈ 5 vol-%, Figure 5b), H2 re-dosing was done by injecting a small volume (1 mL) of pure H2
150
into the headspace (80 mL) of the reaction vessel. The vessel was continuously shaken (210
151
min-1) or stirred by a magnetic stirrer (500 rpm) throughout the whole experiment, kept at
152
ambient temperature (T = 23 ± 2°C) and either kept closed or equipped with a ‘breathing 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 6 of 23
153
system’ (pressure equalization by temporary connection to a continuously purged N2 reservoir,
154
see Fig. S1 in SI). The breathing system was applied especially for analyzing the change in gas
155
phase composition during the reaction and avoiding under-pressure (due to H2 consumption).
156
By means of experiments with variation of agitation intensity it was verified that reaction rates
157
were not controlled by external mass transfer effects including H2 delivery from the headspace
158
into the solution phase. The pH of the reaction suspension was found to be constant within the
159
range of pH = 3.0 ± 0.2. At given time intervals, liquid samples for H2O2 and MTBE analysis
160
were taken. Samples (100 µL) for MTBE analysis by Headspace-GC-MS were filled into 10 mL
161
vials containing 2 mL of 5 mM Na2SO3 in deionized water for quenching of residual H2O2.
162
Recycling experiment: After each run, the bottles containing catalyst and reaction solution
163
were treated with ultrasound for 30 minutes then centrifuged at 3000 rpm for 60 min, after
164
which the liquid phase (~50 mL) was largely removed and replaced by the same volume of
165
deionized water, whereby the solid catalyst was transferred again into the reaction vessel. The
166
next reaction cycle was started as described above.
167
Stoichiometric Fenton experiment: This experiment was conducted in order to determine the
168
hydrogen kinetic isotope effect for MTBE degradation by ●OH. A solution containing 15 mM FeII
169
and 0.2 mM each of MTBE-d0 and -d12 was adjusted with HNO3 to pH = 3. Under vigorous
170
stirring, 15 mM H2O2 were added. After 4 min the reaction was stopped by adding 30 mM
171
Na2SO3; the residual concentrations of MTBE-d0 and -d12 were determined by means of
172
Headspace-GC-MS.
173
Data shown in the figures are mean values of at least three experiments. The error represents
174
the mean deviation of the single values from the mean value.
175
2.3. Analytical methods
176
MTBE-d0 and -d12, TBF, TBA and acetone were analyzed by means of Headspace-GC-MS using a
177
QP 2010 GC-MS device equipped with an AOC-5000 autosampler (Shimadzu Corp.) and a
178
Zebron ZB-5MSi capillary column (30 m x 0.25 mm x 0.5 µm, Phenomenex, Germany).
179
Quantification was performed in SIM mode using the following characteristic ions: m/z = 73 for
180
MTBE-d0, 82 for MTBE-d12, 58 for acetone and 59 for TBA and TBF.
181
H2O2 concentrations were measured photometrically (λ = 405 nm) after adding titanyl sulfate
182
solution. FeII was determined by means of the phenanthroline method28 adapted to analysis of
183
low concentrations (4.5–36 µM) by using 100 QS/50 mm quartz cuvettes. For determining total
184
dissolved iron concentrations, all FeIII present was reduced by addition of ascorbic acid before
185
phenanthroline was added.
6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 7 of 23
Environmental Science & Technology
186
Gas analyses for determination of H2, N2 and O2 were conducted with a GC-TCD system
187
(Agilent 6850) equipped with an HP plot column (30 m x 0.32 mm x 12 µm, Agilent), oven
188
temperature 30°C.
189 190
3. Results and discussion 3.1. FeIII reduction by Pd/H2
191
Initially, the rate of FeIII reduction by the Pd/alumina catalyst in the presence of H2 at pH = 3
192
was studied. With 5 mg L-1 Pd, conversion of FeIII (2 mg L-1 or 36 µM) into FeII was fast (>80%
193
within 1 min, Fig. 1). The recovery of total dissolved iron was within (100 ± 5)% before and
194
after the reduction step, indicating that adsorption of dissolved FeII and FeIII to the solid
195
catalyst was negligible under the applied conditions. At a 10-fold lower Pd concentration (0.5
196
mg L-1), the half-life (t0.5) of FeIII reduction was about 6 min, which implies a specific catalytic
197
activity APd of 330 L g-1 min-1 for FeIII reduction by the Pd/alumina catalyst according to APd =
198
1/(t0.5 × CPd).29 This activity is in the upper range reported for various H2-based reduction
199
reactions catalyzed by supported Pd catalysts (summarized by Chaplin et al.18) including
200
inorganic ions and halogenated organic compounds as substrates. Possibly, the observed rates
201
are already partially mass transfer limited such that the ‘true’ reaction rates are even higher.
202
For comparison, the highly efficient hydrodechlorination of various chlorinated ethenes by the
203
same Pd catalyst (pH = 3) as used in this study runs with Pd activities in the range of 200 to
204
1200 L g-1 min-1.30 Obviously, there is a possibility that activated hydrogen provided by the Pd
205
catalyst can contribute to FeIII reduction in the Fenton system.
206
207 208
Figure 1: FeIII reduction by Pd/H2 (CFeIII,0 = 36 µM, pH = 3, CPd = 0.5 or 5 mg L-1, respectively, as
209
Pd/Al2O3 (0.5 wt-% Pd), Vwater = 50 mL, Vgas = 80 mL (100 vol-% H2)).
7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
210
Page 8 of 23
3.2. Proof of principle
211
Based on the observation that FeIII can be rapidly reduced by H2 in the presence of a
212
heterogeneous Pd catalyst, we conducted an experiment for degradation of MTBE (CMTBE,0 =
213
0.17 mM) under ACF conditions, i.e. in addition to H2O2 (CH2O2,0 = 15 mM) and FeII (CFeII,0 = 1 mg
214
L-1), the reaction suspension contained 5 mg L-1 Pd (as Pd/Al2O3) and H2 was provided as
215
reductant (pH2 = 0.1 MPa). Fig. 2a shows that MTBE was degraded by (97 ± 1)% within 60 min,
216
following pseudo-first-order kinetics with k’ = (0.061 ± 0.005) min-1 and a half-life of about 11
217
min in the ACF system. Control batch experiments were carried out in order to clarify the role
218
of H2 and Pd in the system. Fig. 2a shows that in a conventional catalytic Fenton (CF) system
219
under identical conditions, i.e. CFeII,0 = 1 mg L-1, CH2O2,0 = 15 mM and CMTBE,0 = 0.17 mM, MTBE
220
degradation is extremely slow (≤10% turnover within 90 min). This result is to be expected
221
based on previous studies where the dosage of Fe salts to achieve high MTBE degradation
222
extents within 1-2 h by homogeneous Fenton systems was in the range of 10-260 mg L-1,31-36
223
with the lower limit being for the case of a very low MTBE concentration (0.02 mM).31,32 The
224
addition of only H2 to the CF system has no effect on MTBE degradation rates. The addition of
225
only the Pd catalyst to the CF system leads to a slow but significant MTBE degradation with k’ =
226
(0.0048 ± 0.0005) min-1. The Pd catalyst without dissolved iron showed no significant activity
227
for MTBE oxidation with H2O2, which confirms that OH-radical formation from H2O2 by Pd
228
alone (Eq. 11) is of only minor importance. Thus, there already seems to be a small promoting
229
effect of Pd and Fe even in the absence of H2. Elucidation of the underlying mechanisms of this
230
moderate effect is out of the scope of the present study; some discussion is provided in the SI
231
(part S2). In contrast to the above, a tremendous rate enhancement in the degradation of
232
MTBE is observed in the complete ACF system containing Pd and dissolved FeII as catalysts
233
together with H2 as reductant and H2O2 as oxidant (k’ = 0.061 vs. 0.0048 min-1). Overall, these
234
results emphasize the necessity of the Pd catalyst for the activation of H2 by dissociative
235
adsorption (Eq. 8), providing activated hydrogen as a new reducing agent for FeIII (Eq. 9). The
236
reduction of FeIII by activated hydrogen replaces the slow step of FeIII reduction by H2O2 and
237
thus strongly accelerates the Fe-redox cycle. In accordance with this hypothesis, H2O2
238
consumption (Fig. 2b) is also fastest in the ACF system.
239
It is remarkable that MTBE degradation follows an apparent first-order kinetics down to very
240
low residual concentrations (C/C0 ≤ 0.004), although H2O2 is consumed at a comparable rate
241
(k’MTBE = 0.061 min-1 vs. k’H2O2 = 0.048 min-1). This means that H2O2 is not involved in the rate-
242
limiting step of the ACF oxidation. This conclusion is in conformity with the hypothesis that the
243
hydrogen-driven reduction of FeIII is the rate-limiting step, even under ACF conditions.
8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
ACF CF+Pd
6.5
CF Pd
110
- ln (C/C0) MTBE
5.5
90
4.5
70
3.5
y = 0.061x
50
2.5
30
1.5
y = 0.0048x
0.5
y=0x
-0.5
-10 0
20
40
A
60
80
100
t in min ACF CF + Pd Pd
2.2 1.8
-ln (C/C0) H2O2
10
MTBE conversion in %
Page 9 of 23
CF CF + H2 Pd + H2 y = 0.048x R² = 0.9996
1.4
y = 0.014x R² = 0.996 y = 0.0094x R² = 0.995 y = 0.0072x R² = 0.998
1.0 0.6 0.2
y = 0x
-0.2 0
B
20
40
60
80
100
t in min
244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252
Figure 2 a): MTBE degradation and 2 b): H2O2 consumption under accelerated Fenton (ACF) conditions in comparison to conventional catalytic Fenton (CF) conditions with/without amendment by Pd or H2 individually and in Fe-free Pd-catalyzed reactions. All reactions were conducted in presence of MTBE and H2O2 under the following conditions: CH2O2,0 = 15 mM, CMTBE,0 = 0.17 mM, pH = 3, Vwater = 50 mL, Vgas = 80 mL. Variable components (listed behind symbols and graph notation) were gas composition, dissolved iron (if added: CFe = 18 µM), and Pd/Al2O3 (if added: CPd = 5 mg L-1). (■) CF: FeII, air atmosphere; (▲) ACF: FeII, Pd, H2 atmosphere; (◆) CF + Pd: FeII, Pd, air atmosphere; (×) Pd: Pd, air atmosphere; (ο) CF + H2: FeII, H2 atmosphere; (+) Pd + H2: Pd, H2 atmosphere.
253
In the CF system, H2O2 decomposition is slow due to the low concentration of the Fe catalyst
254
and the bottleneck of its recycling to FeII. H2O2 decomposition in the ACF system can occur via
255
several pathways: I) the regular Fenton chemistry (i.e. via Eqs. 1, 2, 4) which is enhanced by the
256
accelerated Fe(II/III) cycle; II) catalytic dissociation of H2O2 at the Pd surface (Eq. 12), and III) 9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 10 of 23
257
hydrogenation by activated hydrogen at the Pd surface (Eq. 13). In order to estimate the
258
contribution of the various pathways, we conducted individual experiments with the ACF
259
components. The addition of H2 to the CF system had no effect on H2O2 consumption. When
260
Pd alone is present, or only Pd is added to the CF system, H2O2 consumption is already
261
significant due to the Pd-catalyzed H2O2 decomposition (Eq. 12). The presence of H2 further
262
accelerates H2O2 consumption via its hydrogenation over Pd (Eq. 13). This is in accordance with
263
the finding that catalytic H2O2 decomposition (Eq. 12) and hydrogenation (Eq. 13) are equally
264
important in Pd/H2/H2O2 systems at acidic pH.19 Nevertheless, the addition of 1 mg L-1 of
265
dissolved iron to the Pd/H2/H2O2 system, i.e. applying the complete ACF system, still strongly
266
accelerates H2O2 decomposition indicating that the largest part of H2O2 decomposition in the
267
ACF system is caused by the accelerated Fe redox cycle driven by reduction of FeIII at the Pd
268
surface. It is remarkable that the FeIII reduction rate can successfully compete with the H2O2
269
reduction rate, although the H2O2 concentration is about three orders of magnitude higher
270
(e.g. 15 mM vs. 18 µM, in Fig. 2).
271
In any Fenton system, the overall efficiency of H2O2 utilization for contaminant degradation is
272
the product of the efficiencies of ●OH production from H2O2 (E1) and the efficiency of ●OH
273
consumption by reaction with the target contaminant (E2) as described by Eqs. 16 and 178,37 for
274
MTBE. , -MTBE ) , -H2O2 )
=
moles of ●OH produced moles of H2O2 consumed
×
moles of MTBE consumed moles of ●OH produced
= 31 × 32
η = 3# × 3 × 100%
Eq. 16
Eq. 17
275
As mentioned above, H2O2 consumption in the ACF system is composed of the productive
276
pathway leading to ●OH (Eq. 1) and non-productive parallel reactions including those at the Pd
277
surface (Eqs. 12 and 13). The contribution of the latter can be estimated based on the H2O2
278
decomposition rate constant determined in the presence of Pd and H2 without dissolved iron
279
(reaction Pd + H2 in Figure 2b, k’Pd+H2 = 0.014 min-1). Thus, based on the rate laws for parallel
280
reactions, the contribution of H2O2 consumption at the Pd catalyst (Eqs. 12 and 13) to its
281
overall turnover (X) in the ACF system accounts for only 30% (XPd+H2/Xtotal,ACF = k’Pd+H2/k’total,ACF ≈
282
0.3). This non-productive consumption reduces the available amount for ●OH production,
283
leading to an estimated reduction in E1 by a factor of 0.7. It is worthy to note that in all
284
catalytic Fenton reactions FeIII reduction consumes H2O2 which is not available for ●OH
285
production (unless organic reaction intermediates significantly contribute to FeIII reduction).
286
Depending on the reaction conditions and the assumed pathway of the catalytic Fenton cycle,
287
the theoretical efficiency of ●OH production under ideal conditions was calculated to be
288
between 0.58 to 0.67.37 The loss of H2O2 as reductant of FeIII in the ‘conventional’ catalytic
289
Fenton system is at least as high as its parasitic consumption in the ACF system. The factor E2
290
in Eq. 16 is the result of the competition among various consumers for ●OH, including the 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 11 of 23
Environmental Science & Technology
291
target compound (MTBE), its degradation intermediates, H2O2, the Pd/Al2O3 catalyst (with
292
activated H) and possibly other transient species. In a well-defined homogeneous system E2
293
can be estimated from the second-order rate constants and concentrations of all identified
294
●
295
unknown and thus this estimation is not straightforward. Nevertheless, it is obvious that the
296
concentration of H2O2 needs to be optimized as it is one of the relevant consumers of ●OH.
297
Thus, the overall efficiency of H2O2 utilization for MTBE degradation (η, Eq. 17) will be
298
discussed in section 3.4.
299
Even though quantification of steady-state FeII concentrations in the ACF system would be
300
desirable, it cannot be realized with standard laboratory equipment. Any phase separation
301
(removal of solid Pd catalyst) or FeII/III complexation (e.g. with phenanthroline for photo-
302
metry28,38) affects the steady-state FeII concentration, since it is controlled by a number of fast
303
reactions. Nevertheless, we were able to show on a semi-quantitative level that significant FeII
304
concentrations exist in the aqueous phase over the time course of an ACF experiment,
305
whereas in the absence of Pd and H2 (i.e. in a normal catalytic Fenton reaction with the same
306
initial FeII and H2O2 concentrations), FeII concentration dropped below the detection limit
307
within 5 min (SI, part S3). This result confirms again that the reduction of FeIII to FeII by
308
activated hydrogen formed at the Pd catalyst is possible even in the presence of H2O2. No
309
significant changes in total dissolved iron concentration were observed after the ACF reaction.
310
Thus, we suggest that iron switches between its oxidation states via reactions 1 and 9 with
311
[Fe H2 O)5 OH)]
312
hydrolysis equilibria of FeII and FeIII, respectively.17 Due to their low formation constants17, FeIII-
313
peroxide complexes are of minor importance in terms of species concentrations under the
314
applied conditions (see SI, part S2).
315
H2, which was generally provided as 80 mL gas-phase reservoir over 50 mL reaction suspension
316
(i.e. 67 mmol H2/L water), was 45% consumed within 60 min reaction under the conditions of
317
the ACF experiment shown in Fig. 2. In the ‘breathing system’, N2 was sucked into the vessel.
318
O2 was detected only in trace amounts within the gas phase (≤ 4 vol-%) during the whole
319
reaction period. This can be due to two reasons: I) the H2O2 conversion to oxygen in the
320
regular Fenton cycle (with Eq. 2 as initial step) is largely eliminated in the ACF system, and II)
321
intermediately formed oxygen is rapidly hydrogenated.
322
OH consumers. However, in a heterogeneous system, several of these parameters are
2+
and [Fe H2 O)6 ]
2+
as the dominant species based on the pH-dependent
3.3. Indications of reactive species responsible for MTBE oxidation
323
The typical intermediates known from OH-radical-driven MTBE oxidation, i.e. TBA, TBF and
324
acetone32,33,35,39, also appeared in the ACF system, indicating that MTBE degradation follows a
325
similar pathway to that in other AOP systems (see SI, Fig. S4.1 and discussion).
11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 12 of 23
326
TBA, which is known to act as a scavenger of ●OH, largely inhibited MTBE degradation when
327
added to the ACF system at high surplus (SI, Fig. S4.2). In addition, compound-specific stable
328
isotope analysis (CSIA) was applied. Isotope fractionation effects are specific for a certain
329
mechanism and transition state of the reaction.40 In previous studies, CSIA with H/D and
330
13
331
bly FeIV) in photo-Fenton41 and Fe-zeolite-catalyzed Fenton reactions42 or indicated similarity of
332
reactive species (i.e. ●OH) in orthoferrite-catalyzed and homogeneous Fenton systems43. Based
333
on competition kinetics, the slope of the ln-ln plot of the residual concentrations of two sub-
334
strates in the same reaction system, such as MTBE-d0 and -d12, yields AKIEH/D, the so-called
335
apparent (or observable) kinetic deuterium isotope effect (Eq. 18). This value is the ratio of the
336
second-order rate constants for the first attack in the oxidation of the two isotopologues
C/12C compound isotopologues revealed the occurrence of additional oxidants to ●OH (possi-
337
(kH,OH/kD,OH), which is assumed to be H-abstraction from one of the methyl groups of MTBE by
338
●
OH.
ln
-6 -9 =6,>6 / ln = :;6
Eq. 18
339
From the competition kinetics plot, an associated AKIEH/D = 2.01 ± 0.04 was obtained for
340
MTBE-d0 and -d12 degradation in the ACF system (Fig. 3). The excellent conformity with the
341
AKIEH/D observed in a simple stoichiometric Fenton system (2.00 ± 0.04) is a strong argument
342
for ●OH also being the dominant reactive species in the ACF system.
Figure 3: Competition kinetics plot for degradation of MTBE-d0 and -d12 by ACF (●, CFe = 18 µM, CPd = 5 mg L-1, pH = 3, CH2O2,0 = 15 mM, Vwater = 50 mL, Vgas = 80 mL (100 vol-% H2), CMTBE-d0,0 = CMTBE-d12,0 = 0.2 mM) and a stoichiometric Fenton reaction (, CFe = 15 mM, CH2O2,0 = 15 mM, CMTBE-d0,0 = CMTBE-d12,0 = 0.2 mM, pH = 3, after 4 min of reaction).
12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 13 of 23
Environmental Science & Technology
343
3.4. Effects of pH, dissolved iron, H2O2 and H2 concentration on the reaction kinetics
344
For MTBE degradation in the ACF system we observed a pH optimum similar to that generally
345
known for CF reactions (Fig. S5a). MTBE turnover is highest at pH = 3, significantly lower at pH
346
2 and pH 4, and largely inhibited if the solution pH approaches pH 7. This is most likely due to
347
the unfavorable speciation of FeIII which forms insoluble oxyhydroxide precipitates at pH ≥ 3. In
348
addition, H2O2 decomposes faster if the pH is increased from pH = 3 to 7 (Fig. S5a). This effect
349
can be ascribed mainly to the parasitic decomposition and hydrogenation of H2O2 at the Pd
350
catalyst which (in the absence of iron) becomes faster with pH increasing from 3 to 6 (Fig. S5b),
351
in conformity with results of Choudhary et al.19 Thus, even though precipitation of FeIII at pH ≥
352
3 could be counteracted in the ACF system by addition of suitable complexing agents, these
353
efforts would be undermined by the pH effect on parasitic H2O2 decomposition by Pd, which is
354
detrimental for conducting Pd-based ACF processes at near-neutral pH. Thus, the optimal pH
355
for the ACF is pH = 3.
356
The importance of the various ●OH consumers in a reaction system can be estimated from the
357
products of their concentration and rate constants for reaction with ●OH. Even though con-
358
sumption rates for ●OH at the Pd surface cannot be estimated, the importance of the bulk-
359
phase consumers FeII, MTBE and H2O2 can be compared for various conditions. Under the con-
360
ditions applied (CFeII,0 ≤ 36 µM, CMTBE,0 = 0.17 mM), iron is not relevant as consumer of ●OH since
361
it is outcompeted by MTBE with CFeII,0 × k●OH,FeII = 0.04 × (CMTBE,0 × k●OH,MTBE). Thus, the effect of
362
an increased iron concentration on ●OH formation via the Fe redox cycle (Eqs. 1 and 9) is
363
predominantly positive, as shown by the correlation between k’MTBE,initial and CFe in a range of
364
0.5 to 2 mg L-1 (Fig. 4a). Even though higher amounts of dissolved iron increase the rate of
365
contaminant degradation, 18 µM (1 mg L-1) is selected as optimal for the ACF in order to
366
comply with discharge limits and avoid the need of post-treatment for iron removal.
367
Increasing the H2O2 concentration in Fenton-type reactions is only useful up to the point at
368
which H2O2 becomes the dominant quencher of
369
concentration will not increase contaminant degradation rates because the steady-state
370
concentration of ●OH is not increased. MTBE and H2O2 are both equally relevant as consumers
371
of ●OH for CMTBE,0 = 0.17 mM and CH2O2 = 7.5 mM. Thus, we estimate an optimal H2O2
372
concentration below 30 mM, where the ●OH quenching ratio of MTBE : H2O2 is 1 : 3. As
373
discussed in section 3.2, H2O2 can also play a detrimental role as consumer of activated
374
hydrogen at the Pd surface, thus competing with FeIII reduction. The influence of H2O2
375
concentration on the ACF system is illustrated in Fig. 4b, based on MTBE turnover within 60
376
min of reaction. There is clearly an optimal range of H2O2 concentration. In line with the
377
increasing role as consumer of ●OH, H2O2 concentrations ≥ 30 mM are detrimental for MTBE
378
degradation. MTBE turnover was almost equal, and thus in the optimal range, when reactions
●
OH. Any further increase in H2O2
13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 14 of 23
379
were started with initial H2O2 concentrations of 1.7 to 15 mM. Obviously, reactions with low
380
initial H2O2 concentration demand more frequent re-dosing of H2O2 (SI, Fig. S6).
381
The rather low impact of CH2O2 on MTBE degradation is in line with the finding that pseudo-first
382
order kinetics applies for MTBE degradation if started with CH2O2,0 = 15 mM (Fig. 2a), even
383
though H2O2 concentration declines to C/C0 = 0.1 in 60 min. The relative insensitivity of
384
contaminant degradation rate towards CH2O2 over a wide concentration range supports the
385
hypothesis that the rate-determining step of the Fenton cycle, i.e. FeIII reduction, is performed
386
at the Pd catalyst and is thus not dependent on H2O2. In conclusion, H2O2 concentration is in
387
the optimal range if it is: I) high enough to utilize the FeII production rate (via Eq. 9) and thus
388
maximize the rate of ●OH production (Eq. 1), and II) lower than the ●OH quenching limit as
389
described above.
390
The minimum molar ratio of H2O2 : MTBE for achieving ≥ 95 % degradation within 60 min is 59,
391
which is at the higher end of the range of 10 to 55 reported for conventional homogeneous
392
Fenton systems for MTBE degradation in other studies.31-36 However, as discussed before,
393
conventional Fenton systems require significantly higher Fe doses (10–260 mg L-1) and need
394
post-treatment for iron removal.
395
For evaluating the efficiency of H2O2 utilization the initial reaction period (until 25 to 50% of
396
target contaminant conversion) is more appropriate, since at higher turnover the relative
397
contribution of other ●OH consumers such as degradation intermediates becomes increasingly
398
relevant. Thus, we determined the utilization efficiency η50 which is mol of MTBE degraded per
399
mol of H2O2 consumed (in %, Eqs. 16 and 17) in the reaction period until 50% MTBE conversion
400
are reached. Among the experiments with various modes of H2O2 dosage (Figure 4b) which
401
reached comparable MTBE conversion rates (≥ 95% degradation in 60 min), the highest η50
402
value of 3% was obtained with the lowest stationary H2O2 concentration (1.7 mM H2O2 dosed
403
every 10 min), while η50 = 1.4% for experiments started with 15 mM H2O2. Taking into account
404
that non-productive consumption of H2O2 at the Pd catalyst was estimated to reduce E1 to
405
≤70%, the contribution of E2, i.e. consumption of ●OH by other species than MTBE, appears to
406
be the critical factor for H2O2 utilization efficiency in the ACF system. Relevant ●OH consumers
407
beside MTBE are its oxidation intermediates, H2O2 (which is largely ruled out at the lowest
408
applied H2O2 concentration in Fig. 4), but also activated hydrogen at the Pd surface. Dissolved
409
molecular hydrogen (H2) can be neglected as ●OH consumer because of its low aqueous
410
solubility (0.8 mM) and its low reactivity (kH2,OH ≈ 5 x 107 L mol-1 s-1).
411
For comparison, η50 = 9.2% can be calculated from the data reported by Hwang et al.34 for
412
MTBE degradation in a homogeneous Fenton reaction (k’MTBE = 9.0 h-1, k’H2O2 = 1.4 h-1, C0,MTBE =
413
0.11 mM, C0,H2O2 = 6 mM, CFe(NO3)3 = 5 mM, pH 3). Heterogeneous Fenton-like catalysts, such as
414
iron oxides2,44, iron containing perovskites43 or iron supported on alumosilicates44, even though 14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 15 of 23
Environmental Science & Technology
415
they are able to work at near neutral pH, show much lower catalytic activities (contaminant
416
half-lifes in the range of hours at g L-1 solid catalyst and H2O2 concentrations) and lower H2O2
417
utilization efficiencies (for iron oxides typically > L●OH, appears to be a prerequisite for the
504
efficiency of the ACF system, since it shifts the location of ●OH production and consumption
505
into the water phase, i.e. towards dissolved contaminants and away from the solid catalyst
506
surface, where active hydrogen species can quench ●OH by recombination. Nevertheless, this
507
●
508
H2O2 for contaminant degradation in the ACF system. Internal mass-transfer limitations within
509
the microporous particles of the commercial Pd on γ-Al2O3 catalyst cannot be excluded for the
510
fast reactions involved in the ACF system, which can also affect oxidant efficiency. Thus, future
511
studies should include optimization of the Pd catalyst support including the use of
512
nanoparticles instead of microporous supports, such that FeII can unhindered diffuse into the
513
bulk water phase, away from ●OH quenching surfaces. In summary, the ACF system allows the
514
excellent activity of dissolved FeII to be utilized for ●OH production at extremely low catalyst
515
concentration, thus eliminating the need to remove or recycle the iron catalyst. This is
516
achieved by introducing a clean reductant (H2) and a highly efficient, recyclable solid Pd
517
catalyst for accelerating the slowest step of the Fenton cycle, i.e. FeIII reduction. In contrast to
518
previous approaches for enhancement of Fenton reactions by addition of reductants such as
519
hydroxyl amine14 or ascorbic acid15, the reductant H2 applied in ACF is inexpensive, leaves no
520
residues in the treated water and is less reactive towards oxidation by ●OH (by up to two
521
orders of magnitude) than many water pollutants. Using externally supplied H2O2 and low
522
concentrations of H2 (below the level of explosive gas), the ACF system facilitates efficient and
523
safe contaminant oxidation with only trace amounts of iron. Thus, the ACF approach presented
524
in this study offers potential for the development of significantly improved water treatment
525
technologies.
526
Supporting Information: Details on experimental setup, impact of Pd (without H2) in catalytic
527
Fenton reactions, experimental details and results on iron speciation in ACF, MTBE oxidation
528
intermediates, quenching experiments, influence of pH on ACF and H2O2 decomposition by
529
Pd/H2, ACF with various modes of H2O2 dosage, in-situ formation of H2O2, ACF at reduced H2
530
concentration, stability of Pd/Al2O3 catalyst.
OH quenching process certainly remains an important factor for the utilization efficiency of
19 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 20 of 23
531
Acknowledgement:
532
Funding by ESF (Grant: 24127008/TG74) and Sächsische Aufbaubank is gratefully
533
acknowledged.
534
5. References
535 536 537
1. Pignatello, J. J.; Oliveros, E.; MacKay, A., Advanced oxidation processes for organic contaminant destruction based on the Fenton reaction and related chemistry. Crit. Rev. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2006, 36 (1), 1-84.
538 539 540
2. Rusevova, K.; Kopinke, F. D.; Georgi, A., Nano-sized magnetic iron oxides as catalysts for heterogeneous Fenton-like reactions-Influence of Fe(II)/Fe(III) ratio on catalytic performance. J. Hazard. Mater. 2012, 241 433-440.
541 542 543
3. Kwan, W. P.; Voelker, B. M., Rates of hydroxyl radical generation and organic compound oxidation in mineral-catalyzed Fenton-like systems. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2003, 37 (6), 1150-1158.
544 545 546
4. Sun, S. P.; Lemley, A. T., p-Nitrophenol degradation by a heterogeneous Fenton-like reaction on nano-magnetite: Process optimization, kinetics, and degradation pathways. J. Mol. Catal. a-Chem. 2011, 349 (1-2), 71-79.
547 548
5. Hartmann, M.; Kullmann, S.; Keller, H., Wastewater treatment with heterogeneous Fenton-type catalysts based on porous materials. J. Mater. Chem. 2010, 20 (41), 9002-9017.
549 550 551
6. Gonzalez-Olmos, R.; Roland, U.; Toufar, H.; Kopinke, F. D.; Georgi, A., Fe-zeolites as catalysts for chemical oxidation of MTBE in water with H2O2. Appl. Catal. b-Environ. 2009, 89 (3-4), 356-364.
552 553 554
7. Sillanpää, M. E. T.; Kurniawan, T. A.; Lo, W. H., Degradation of chelating agents in aqueous solution using advanced oxidation process (AOP). Chemosphere 2011, 83 (11), 14431460.
555 556 557
8. Kwan, W. P.; Voelker, B. M., Decomposition of hydrogen peroxide and organic compounds in the presence of dissolved iron and ferrihydrite. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2002, 36 (7), 1467-1476.
558 559
9. Kavitha, V.; Palanivelu, K., The role of ferrous ion in Fenton and photo-Fenton processes for the degradation of phenol. Chemosphere 2004, 55 (9), 1235-1243.
560 561
10. Aplin, R.; Feitz, A. J.; Waite, T. D., Effect of Fe(III)-ligand properties on effectiveness of modified photo-Fenton processes. Water Sci. Technol. 2001, 44 (5), 23-30.
562 563 564
11. Sires, I.; Brillas, E.; Oturan, M. A.; Rodrigo, M. A.; Panizza, M., Electrochemical advanced oxidation processes: today and tomorrow. A review. Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res. 2014, 21 (14), 8336-8367.
565 566 567
12. Paciolla, M. D.; Kolla, S.; Jansen, S. A., The reduction of dissolved iron species by humic acid and subsequent production of reactive oxygen species. Adv. Environ. Res. 2002, 7 (1), 169178.
20 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 21 of 23
Environmental Science & Technology
568 569 570
13. Duesterberg, C. K.; Waite, T. D., Kinetic Modeling of the Oxidation of p-Hydroxybenzoic Acid by Fenton's Reagent: Implications of the Role of Quinones in the Redox Cycling of Iron. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2007, 41 (11), 4103-4110.
571 572 573
14. Chen, L. W.; Ma, J.; Li, X. C.; Zhang, J.; Fang, J. Y.; Guan, Y. H.; Xie, P. C., Strong Enhancement on Fenton Oxidation by Addition of Hydroxylamine to Accelerate the Ferric and Ferrous Iron Cycles. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2011, 45 (9), 3925-3930.
574 575 576
15. Fukuchi, S.; Nishimoto, R.; Fukushima, M.; Zhu, Q. Q., Effects of reducing agents on the degradation of 2,4,6-tribromophenol in a heterogeneous Fenton-like system with an ironloaded natural zeolite. Appl. Catal. b-Environ. 2014, 147 411-419.
577
16.
578 579 580
17. Gallard, H.; De Laat, J.; Legube, B., Spectrophotometric study of the formation of iron(III)-hydroperoxy complexes in homogeneous aqueous solutions. Water Res. 1999, 33 (13), 2929-2936.
581 582 583
18. Chaplin, B. P.; Reinhard, M.; Schneider, W. F.; Schuth, C.; Shapley, J. R.; Strathmann, T. J.; Werth, C. J., Critical Review of Pd-Based Catalytic Treatment of Priority Contaminants in Water. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2012, 46 (7), 3655-3670.
584 585 586
19. Choudhary, V. R.; Samanta, C.; Jana, P., Decomposition and/or hydrogenation of hydrogen peroxide over Pd/Al2O3 catalyst in aqueous medium: Factors affecting the rate of H2O2 destruction in presence of hydrogen. Appl. Catal. a-Gen. 2007, 332 (1), 70-78.
587 588 589
20. Yuan, S. Y.; Fan, Y.; Zhang, Y. C.; Tong, M.; Liao, P., Pd-catalytic in situ generation of H2O2 from H2 and O2 produced by water electrolysis for the efficient electro-Fenton degradation of rhodamine B. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2011, 45 (19), 8514-8520.
590 591 592 593
21. Yuan, S. H.; Mao, X. H.; Alshawabkeh, A. N., Efficient Degradation of TCE in Groundwater Using Pd and Electro-generated H2 and O2: A Shift in Pathway from Hydrodechlorination to Oxidation in the Presence of Ferrous Ions. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2012, 46 (6), 3398-3405.
594 595 596
22. Choudhary, V. R.; Samanta, C.; Choudhary, T. V., Factors influencing decomposition of H2O2 over supported Pd catalyst in aqueous medium. J. Mol. Catal. a-Chem. 2006, 260 (1-2), 115-120.
597 598 599
23. Luo, M. S.; Yuan, S. H.; Tong, M.; Liao, P.; Xie, W. J.; Xu, X. F., An integrated catalyst of Pd supported on magnetic Fe3O4 nanoparticles: Simultaneous production of H2O2 and Fe2+ for efficient electro-Fenton degradation of organic contaminants. Water Res. 2014, 48 190-199.
600 601 602
24. Liao, P.; Yuan, S. H.; Chen, M. J.; Tong, M.; Xie, W. J.; Zhang, P., Regulation of Electrochemically Generated Ferrous Ions from an Iron Cathode for Pd-Catalytic Transformation of MTBE in Groundwater. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2013, 47 (14), 7918-7926.
603 604
25. Tomar, M., Quality assessment of water and wastewater Lewis Publishers: Boca Raton, 1999.
605 606 607
26. Yalfani, M. S.; Contreras, S.; Medina, F.; Sueiras, J. E., Hydrogen substitutes for the in situ generation of H2O2: An application in the Fenton reaction. J. Hazard. Mater. 2011, 192 (1), 340-346.
NDRL/NIST Solution Kinetics Database on the Web. http://kinetics.nist.gov/solution/.
21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 22 of 23
608 609 610
27. Environmental Protection Agency of Ireland, Parameters of Water Quality: Interpretation and Standards https://www.epa.ie/pubs/advice/water/quality/Water_Quality.pdf.
611 612 613
28. Muir, M. K.; Andersen, T. N., Determination of ferrous iron in copper-process metallurgical solutions by ortho-phenanthroline colorimetric method. Metall. Trans. B 1977, 8 (3), 517-518.
614 615 616
29. Kopinke, F. D.; Mackenzie, K.; Kohler, R., Catalytic hydrodechlorination of groundwater contaminants in water and in the gas phase using Pd/gamma-Al2O3. Appl. Catal. b-Environ. 2003, 44 (1), 15-24.
617 618 619
30. Mackenzie, K.; Frenzel, H.; Kopinke, F. D., Hydrodehalogenation of halogenated hydrocarbons in water with Pd catalysts: Reaction rates and surface competition. Appl. Catal. b-Environ. 2006, 63 (3-4), 161-167.
620 621 622
31. Burbano, A.; Dionysiou, D.; Suidan, M.; Richardson, T., Chemical destruction of MTBE using Fenton's Reagent: effect of ferrous iron/hydrogen peroxide ratio. Water Sci. Technol. 2003, 47 (9), 165-171.
623 624
32. Burbano, A. A.; Dionysiou, D. D.; Suidan, M. T., Effect of oxidant-to-substrate ratios on the degradation of MTBE with Fenton reagent. Water Res. 2008, 42 (12), 3225-3239.
625 626 627
33. Burbano, A. A.; Dionysiou, D. D.; Suidan, M. T.; Richardson, T. L., Oxidation kinetics and effect of pH on the degradation of MTBE with Fenton reagent. Water Res. 2005, 39 (1), 107118.
628 629
34. Hwang, S.; Huling, S. G.; Ko, S., Fenton-like degradation of MTBE: Effects of iron counter anion and radical scavengers. Chemosphere 2010, 78 (5), 563-568.
630 631
35. Xu, X. R.; Zhao, Z. Y.; Li, X. Y.; Gu, J. D., Chemical oxidative degradation of methyl tertbutyl ether in aqueous solution by Fenton's reagent. Chemosphere 2004, 55 (1), 73-79.
632 633 634
36. Siedlecka, E. M.; Stepnowski, P., Effect of chlorides and sulfates on the performance of a Fe3+/H2O2 Fenton-like system in the degradation of methyl tert-butyl ether and its byproducts. Water Environ. Res. 2007, 79 (11), 2318-2324.
635 636 637
37. Huling, S. G.; Arnold, R. G.; Sierka, R. A.; Miller, M. R., Measurement of hydroxyl radical activity in a soil slurry using the spin trap alpha-(4-pyridyl-1-oxide)-N-tert-butylnitrone. Environ. Sci. Technol. 1998, 32 (21), 3436-3441.
638 639 640
38. de Avelar, I. G. J.; Magalhaes, M. M. M.; Silva, A. B.; Souza, L. L.; Leitao, A. C.; HermesLima, M., Reevaluating the role of 1,10-phenanthroline in oxidative reactions involving ferrous ions and DNA damage. Bba-Gen. Subjects 2004, 1675 (1-3), 46-53.
641 642
39. Bergendahl, J. A.; Thies, T. P., Fenton's oxidation of MTBE with zero-valent iron. Water Res. 2004, 38 (2), 327-334.
643 644 645
40. Elsner, M., Stable isotope fractionation to investigate natural transformation mechanisms of organic contaminants: principles, prospects and limitations. J. Environ. Monitor. 2010, 12 (11), 2005-2031.
22 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 23 of 23
Environmental Science & Technology
646 647
41. Pignatello, J. J.; Liu, D.; Huston, P., Evidence for an additional oxidant in the photoassisted Fenton reaction. Environ. Sci. Technol. 1999, 33 (11), 1832-1839.
648 649 650
42. Gonzalez-Olmos, R.; Holzer, F.; Kopinke, F. D.; Georgi, A., Indications of the reactive species in a heterogeneous Fenton-like reaction using Fe-containing zeolites. Appl. Catal. aGen. 2011, 398 (1-2), 44-53.
651 652 653
43. Rusevova, K.; Koferstein, R.; Rosell, M.; Richnow, H. H.; Kopinke, F. D.; Georgi, A., LaFeO3 and BiFeO3 perovskites as nanocatalysts for contaminant degradation in heterogeneous Fenton-like reactions. Chem. Eng. J. 2014, 239 322-331.
654 655 656
44. Pham, A. L. T.; Lee, C.; Doyle, F. M.; Sedlak, D. L., A silica-supported iron oxide catalyst capable of activating hydrogen peroxide at neutral pH values. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2009, 43 (23), 8930-8935.
657 658 659
45. Wang, N.; Zhu, L. H.; Lei, M.; She, Y. B.; Cao, M. J.; Tang, H. Q., Ligand-induced drastic enhancement of catalytic activity of Nano-BiFeO3 for oxidative degradation of Bisphenol A. ACS Catal. 2011, 1 (10), 1193-1202.
660 661 662
46. Lyu, L.; Zhang, L. L.; Wang, Q. Y.; Nie, Y. L.; Hu, C., Enhanced Fenton catalytic efficiency of gamma-Cu-Al2O3 by sigma-Cu2+-ligand complexes from aromatic pollutant degradation. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2015, 49 (14), 8639-8647.
663 664 665
47. Gonzalez-Olmos, R.; Kopinke, F. D.; Mackenzie, K.; Georgi, A., Hydrophobic Fe-Zeolites for Removal of MTBE from Water by Combination of Adsorption and Oxidation. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2013, 47 (5), 2353-2360.
666 667
48. Samanta, C., Direct synthesis of hydrogen peroxide from hydrogen and oxygen: An overview of recent developments in the process. Appl. Catal. a-Gen. 2008, 350 (2), 133-149.
668 669 670
49. Hildebrand, H.; Mackenzie, K.; Kopinke, F. D., Pd/Fe3O4 nano-catalysts for selective dehalogenation in wastewater treatment processes-Influence of water constituents. Appl. Catal. b-Environ. 2009, 91 (1-2), 389-396.
671 672 673
50. Angeles-Wedler, D.; Mackenzie, K.; Kopinke, F. D., Permanganate oxidation of sulfur compounds to prevent poisoning of Pd catalysts in water treatment processes. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2008, 42 (15), 5734-5739.
674 675 676
51. Yalfani, M. S.; Contreras, S.; Llorca, J.; Dominguez, M.; Sueiras, J. E.; Medina, F., Simultaneous in situ generation of hydrogen peroxide and Fenton reaction over Pd-Fe catalysts. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 2010, 12 (44), 14673-14676.
677
23 ACS Paragon Plus Environment