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Activation of Manganese Oxidants with Bisulfite for Enhanced Oxidation of Organic Contaminants: The Involvement of Mn(III) Bo Sun, Xiaohong Guan, Jingyun Fang, and Paul G. Tratnyek Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 30 Sep 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 5, 2015
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Environmental Science & Technology
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Activation of Manganese Oxidants with Bisulfite for
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Enhanced Oxidation of Organic Contaminants:
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The Involvement of Mn(III)
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Bo Sun1,2, Xiaohong Guan1*, Jingyun Fang3, and Paul G. Tratnyek4* 1
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State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resources Reuse, Tongji University, Shanghai 20092, P. R. China
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2
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State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150090, P. R. China
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3
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Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou 510275, China
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School of Environmental Science and Engineering,
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Institute of Environmental Health, Oregon Health & Science University,
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3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, Oregon 97239-3098, USA
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*Contact/Corresponding author contact information:
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Email:
[email protected] (X.H. Guan); Phone: +86-21-65980956.
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E-mail:
[email protected] (P.G. Tratnyek); Phone: 503-346-3431.
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9/26/15 9:25 AM
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ABSTRACT: MnO4- was activated by HSO3-, resulting in a process that oxidizes
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organic contaminants at extraordinarily high rates. The permanganate/bisulfite
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(PM/BS) process oxidized phenol, ciprofloxacin, and methyl blue at pHini 5.0 with
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rates (kobs ≈ 60-150 s−1) that were 5-6 orders of magnitude faster than those measured
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for permanganate alone, and ~5 to 7 orders of magnitude faster than conventional
24
advanced oxidation processes for water treatment. Oxidation of phenol was fastest at
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pH 4.0, but still effective at pH 7.0, and only slightly slower when performed in tap
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water. A smaller, but still considerable (~3 orders of magnitude) increase in oxidation
27
rates of methyl blue was observed with MnO2 activated by HSO3- (MO/BS). The
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above results, time-resolved spectroscopy of manganese species under various
29
conditions, stoichiometric analysis of pH changes, and the effect of pyrophosphate on
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UV absorbance spectra suggest that the reactive intermediate(s) responsible for the
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extremely rapid oxidation of organic contaminants in the PM/BS process involve
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manganese(III) species with minimal stabilization by complexation. The PM/BS
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process may lead to a new category of advanced oxidation technologies based on
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contaminant oxidation by reactive manganese(III) species, rather than hydroxyl and
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sulfate radicals.
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INTRODUCTION
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Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) are effective at removing many organic
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contaminants from water because they generate strong radical oxidants such as
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hydroxyl radical (HO•) and sulfate radical (SO4•−). Hydroxyl and sulfate radicals are
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known to rapidly oxidize organic compounds at nearly diffusion controlled rates (i.e.,
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second-order rate constants, k″ ≈ 109-1010 M−1 s−1).1, 2 However, even in optimized
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AOPs, the maximum concentrations of HO• and SO4•− are low (10-12-10-14 M),3 so the
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apparent degradation rates of some contaminants can be slow. Perhaps the most
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promising approach to overcoming this limitation of conventional AOPs would be a
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process that is mediated by strongly oxidizing species that can be generated at higher
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concentrations than HO• and SO4•−. Here we describe a novel, and very promising
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example of this approach, which involves the activation of manganese oxidants
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(permanganate and manganese dioxide) to form reactive Mn(III) species.
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The oxidation of contaminants by permanganate has been studied extensively
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because of its environmental applications for remediation of contaminated soil and
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groundwater,4-6 and water treatment to control various organic pollutants,7-10
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dissolved manganese/iron, taste/odor, etc.11 Compared to other chemical oxidants, the
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advantages of permanganate include modest cost, easy and safe storage and delivery,
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applicability over a wide range of conditions, and no tendency to form chlorinated or
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brominated byproducts.4 Another common manganese oxidant, manganese dioxide
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(MnO2), has also been used to oxidize various organic compounds including
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antibiotics,12 anilines,13 phenols,14 steroid estrogens,15 etc.
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Although permanganate is widely regarded as a strong oxidant, the rates of
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oxidation by permanganate are highly variable, and moderate to slow for some
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important contaminants.16 Many recent studies have investigated the kinetics of
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contaminant oxidation by permanganate, including the determination of new rate
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constants,7,
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relationships,19, 21 and enhancement of reaction rates by catalysis.22, 23 In most cases,
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the experimental work for these studies has been done under pseudo first-order
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conditions, with permanganate in excess, so any residual permanganate must be
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quenched to stabilize the test contaminant concentrations until they are analyzed. The
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reductants that have been used for this purpose include Na2S2O3,24, 25 Na2SO3,26 and
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NH2OH•HCl.9, 27 However, very little effort has been devoted to evaluation of these
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choices, even though protocols for quenching permanganate are likely to be affected
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by the same issues that are well documented in studies of oxidation by peroxides.28-30
17, 18
constructing more powerful kinetic models,19,
20
structure-activity
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As part of our work on the kinetics of contaminant oxidation by permanganate,
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we tested several inorganic reductants, over a range of conditions, to evaluate their
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suitability as quenchers of residual permanganate. Surprisingly, we discovered that
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adding Na2SO3 resulted in greatly accelerated rates of organic contaminant oxidation.
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To our knowledge, this effect has never been recognized previously in the context of
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water treatment processes using permanganate. Since sulfite and bisulfite (SO32−, 26-Sep-15
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HSO3−) are species that could be applied in environmental engineering processes, the
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effect described here could become the basis for a novel advanced oxidation process
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(AOP) involving activation of permanganate. Therefore, the objectives of this study
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were to (1) investigate the kinetics of organic contaminant degradation by HSO3-
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activated MnO4- (PM/BS) over a range of relevant solution conditions; (2) explore the
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possibility of oxidizing permanganate-refractory contaminants by the PM/BS process;
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(3) provide a preliminary characterization of the contaminant oxidation products and
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pathway, and (4) identify the intermediate oxidant(s) responsible for the enhancement
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of contaminant oxidation in this process.
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EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
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Materials.
Potassium
permanganate
(GR
grade),
sodium
thiosulfate
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pentahydrate (GR grade), phenol (99% pure) and sodium oxalate (AR grade) were
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purchased from the Tianjin Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd. (Tianjin, China). Sodium
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bisulfite (AR grade), and sodium persulfate (AR grade) were obtained from Chinasun
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Specialty Products Co., Ltd. (Jiangsu, China). Methyl blue (AR grade), hydrogen
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peroxide (30 wt%), nitrobenzene (AR grade) and sodium pyrophosphate (PP, AR
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grade) were supplied by the Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd. (Shanghai,
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China). Ciprofloxacin (AR grade) and caffeine (AR grade) was purchased from the
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Aladdin Industrial Corporation. Methanol (99.9% pure) was supplied by Merck KgaA
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(Germany). All chemicals were used as received.
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The KMnO4 crystal was dissolved in Milli-Q water to make a 50 mM stock
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solution. The stock solution of NaHSO3 (250 mM) and MnCl2 (50 mM) were freshly
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prepared for each set of experiments to avoid oxidation by oxygen. The stock solution
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of phenol (1.0 mM), ciprofloxacin (1.0 mM), methyl blue (1.0 mM), Na2S2O3 (100.0
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mM) and Na4P2O7 (50.0 mM) were prepared in Milli-Q water every day. A stable
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colloidal MnO2 stock solution was prepared freshly before use following the
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procedure in literature31 by mixing the appropriate amounts of Mn(VII) and Na2S2O3
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stock solutions. The Mn(III)-PP stock solution was synthesized by mixing 500 µL
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KMnO4 (50 mM) and 500 µL NaHSO3 (250 mM) in the presence of 50 mL Na4P2O7
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(50 mM) and 449 mL Milli-Q water at pH 5.0.
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Experimental Procedures. A stopped-flow spectrophotometer (SFS, Model
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SX20, Applied Photophysics Ltd., Leatherhead, UK) was used to conduct the rapid
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kinetic experiments. A photodiode array for acquisition of multi-wavelength
111
absorption, a UV-visible spectrophotometer and a fluorimeter were used as the
112
detectors with a 150 W xenon lamp as the light source. An HP computer workstation
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was employed to control the stopped-flow and acquire the kinetic data.
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Before the stopped-flow kinetic experiments, two working solutions were
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prepared. One working solution contained 100 µM permanganate and the other
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contained 500 µM bisulfite and substrates of interest. The solutions were adjusted to
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the target pH levels by adding HCl or NaOH. Reactions were initiated by
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simultaneously injecting an equal volume of two working solutions into the optical 26-Sep-15
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cell of the SFS with two automatic syringes driven by compressed nitrogen. Three
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organic substrates—including methyl blue, phenol, and ciprofloxacin—were selected
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as the test contaminants in the SFS experiments because they could be detected in situ
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by UV and fluorescence methods without interference of MnO4-/MnO2, and they have
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frequently been detected in wastewater.
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The 3-D UV-visible spectrum of the reaction between HSO3- and MnO4- in the
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presence or absence of pyrophosphate or phenol was conducted using photodiode
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array at 350-725 nm. To verify the generation of Mn(III) in the reaction between
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HSO3- and MnO4- or MnO2, the change of UV absorbance at 258 nm with time was
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determined with the stopped-flow spectrophotometer. In separate batch experiments,
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the reaction products generated in the reaction between bisulfite and KMnO4 or MnO2,
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in the presence or absence of pyrophosphate or phenol, after reacting for 10 minutes
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were characterized with the UV-vis spectrum collected with a Purkinje TU-1902
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automatic scanning UV-visible spectrophotometer at 200-800 nm with wavelength
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program controllers.
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The kinetic experiments with the reaction time > 5 minutes were conducted with
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glass bottles open to the air. Reactions were initiated by quickly spiking KMnO4,
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MnO2, or Mn(III)-PP into the solution containing the test contaminant (phenol,
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nitrobenzene, or caffeine) and the constituents of interest at initial pH (pHini) 5.0
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while they were being mixed with a magnetic stirrer. Sodium acetate (1 mM) was
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used as a buffer for the reactions at pH 5.0 in the oxidation of contaminants by 26-Sep-15
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KMnO4/MnO2 alone. The negligible effects of acetate on these reaction have been
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discussed previously.25 Periodically, 10.0 mL of sample was rapidly transferred into a
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25 mL beaker, immediately quenched with 100 µL of a sodium thiosulfate stock
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solution, and then subject to analysis with an
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chromatography (UPLC). To determine the mineralization of oxalate in the PM/BS
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process, pH of the solution containing 200 µM sodium oxalate and 1000 µM NaHSO3
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was adjusted to 5.0 before application of 500 µM KMnO4. Samples were collected
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periodically, quenched and analyzed for total organic carbon (TOC). All kinetic
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experiments were carried out in at least triplicate at 18±2 oC, and the data were
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averaged with the standard deviations < 5% unless otherwise noted. During all of the
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experiments, the initial pH was adjusted to the pre-determined value, but pH was not
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controlled constant in any other way during the reaction without buffer.
ultra-performance liquid
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Chemical Analysis. In the SFS experiments, the concentration of methyl blue
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was continuously monitored at 626 nm with a UV-Visible spectrophotometer. The
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change in concentration of phenol and ciprofloxacin were continuously detected by
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fluorimetry at Ex/Em = 272 nm/298 nm and 277 nm/450 nm, respectively. The
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concentration of phenol, nitrobenzene, and caffeine in the samples taken from batch
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experiments was quantified by UPLC (Waters Co.). Separation was accomplished
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with an UPLC BEH C18 column (2.1 × 100 mm, 1.7 µm; Waters Co.) at 35 ± 1 oC
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and a mobile phase of methanol-0.1% formic acid aqueous solution (from 40:60 to
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70:30). The flow rate was 0.3 mL min-1 and the largest volume injection was 10 µL. 26-Sep-15
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Concentrations of compounds were determined by comparing the peak area at
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254-273 nm with that of the corresponding compounds standards. The TOC analysis
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was performed with a TOC analyzer (TOC-LCPH, SHIMADZU). The variation of pH
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values of the reaction solutions were measured by a pH meter with a saturated KCl
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solution as an electrolyte. Daily calibration with proper buffer solution (pH 4.00 and
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6.86) was performed to ensure its accuracy.
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DMPO (5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrrolidine-N-oxide) was used as the spin-trapping agent
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in the electron spin resonance (ESR) experiments. KMnO4 or MnCl2 was added into
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the solution containing DMPO and NaHSO3 at pH 5.0, and the mixed solution was
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then inserted into the cavity of the ESR spectrometer (Bruker EMX-8/2.7).
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Measurements were carried out under the following conditions: a center field of 3517
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Gs, a sweep width of 100 Gs, a microwave frequency of 20 mW, a modulation
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amplitude of 1 Gs and a sweep time of 41.96 s.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Contaminant Oxidation in the PM/BS Process. The disappearance kinetics of
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phenol, ciprofloxacin, and methyl blue in the PM/BS process were determined with
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stopped-flow spectroscopy and the results are shown in Figure 1(A-C). At pHini 5.0,
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complete disappearance of these three test contaminants was observed in 40-80 ms.
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MnO4- alone oxidized these test contaminants much more slowly, as shown by the
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inset graphs in Figure 1, and there was no detectable reaction with NaHSO3 alone (not 26-Sep-15
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shown). To model the kinetics for the PM/BS process and the MO/BS process (MnO2
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and NaHSO3, introduced below), we fit the majority of the data to pseudo first-order
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kinetics after excluding a few data points that suggest an initial lag phase (Figure
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1A-D). Kinetic data obtained with MnO4− and MnO2 in the absence of HSO3− (Figure
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1A-D insets) exhibit no lag, so these data were fit as pseudo first-order initial rates.
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The pseudo first-order rate constants (kobs) obtained by fitting the data in Figure
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1 are given in Table 1. For the three contaminants tested, kobs is on the order of 100 s−1
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with PM/BS, 0.1 s−1 for MO/BS, and 0.0001 s−1 for MnO4− and MnO2 only. Thus, the
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enhancement of contaminant oxidation rates by activating MnO4− (and MnO2) with
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bisulfite is roughly three to six orders-of-magnitude, under the conditions tested (e.g.,
192
pHini = 5.0). For comparison with these very high reaction rates, we compiled the
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previously published kinetic data for degradation of the test contaminants by
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conventional and established advanced oxidation processes, and summarized those
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values in Tables S1-S2 (for phenol and ciprofloxacin only, insufficient data are
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available on methylene blue). The literature values of kobs typically fall in the range
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10−3 to 10−5 s−1, which are 5 to 7 orders of magnitude slower than those reported here
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for the PM/BS process. Additional exploratory experiments showed that the PM/BS
199
process at pHini 5.0 can even oxidize contaminants that are relatively recalcitrant to
200
oxidation by permanganate: such as nitrobenzene and caffeine, which gave t1/2 on the
201
order of ms (Figure S1).
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The influence of initial pH on the degradation of phenol in the PM/BS process
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was investigated and the results are shown in Figure 2. The lag phase in the pHini 5.0
204
data (Figure 1A, Figure 2B), is even more prominent at pHini 6.0, but not evident in
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the higher or lower pH data, which is fully explained by the reaction stoichiometry as
206
described in the next section. At pHini 4.0-7.0, 5 µM phenol was completely degraded,
207
but only ~50% was removed at pHini 8.0-9.0. The inefficiency of the PM/BS process
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for phenol decomposition at pHini 8.0-9.0 may be due to a shift in speciation from
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bisulfite to sulfite (pKa = 7.2)32 and the higher disproportionation rate of Mn(III)
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under alkaline conditions.
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Neglecting the initial lag and final plateau data, the remaining data in Figure 2
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were fit to pseudo first-order kinetics and the resulting values of kobs are given in
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Table 1. The rate constants for the PM/BS process decreased about 100-fold with
214
pHini increased from 4.0 to 8.0. The very fast decomposition of phenol over the pHini
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range of 4.0-7.0 in the PM/BS process indicates that the PM/BS process may be
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effective for removing organic contaminants under neutral and acidic conditions.
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The performance of AOPs can be affected by other solution conditions (besides
218
pH) in a variety of ways, such as the scavenging of hydroxyl radicals by carbonate33
219
and the chlorination of organics by chlorine radical formed from chloride.34 To
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provide a preliminary and practical assessment of the sensitivity of the PM/BS
221
process to solution conditions, the kinetics of phenol oxidation were studied in
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solutions made from tap water of our lab (DOC = 2.4 mg C L−1, alkalinity = 0.34 mM 26-Sep-15
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as HCO3−, [Fe3+] + [Fe2+] = 2 µM).35 The results, shown in Figure S2, indicate there is
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negligible difference in the kinetics of phenol oxidation between tap and DI water at
225
pHini 5.0, and this reaction is only slightly slower in tap water at pHini 7.0.
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Measurements of TOC at the end of the stopped-flow experiments showed no
227
evidence of mineralization, but complete oxidation of the contaminants was not
228
expected under the conditions of these experiments (based on stoichiometric
229
calculations). However, as with other AOPs, the PM/BS process is expected to
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produce intermediate organic oxidation products that include carboxylic acids,
231
aldehydes, etc.36,
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conventional AOPs have shown that oxalic acid accumulates (because it is relatively
233
unreactive with •OH), which makes oxalate formation a key barrier to
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mineralization.38 A preliminary experiment designed to test for oxalate degradation by
235
the PM/BS process showed ~90.0% mineralized in 60 min at pHini 5.0 (Figure S3).
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This suggests that the PM/BS process may provide more complete oxidation of
237
organics than conventional AOPs, which could be a major advantage of the former,
238
and so will be investigated further in detail in a future study.
37
Detailed studies of products/pathways of phenol oxidation by
239
Reactive Intermediates in the PM/BS Process. To characterize the overall
240
reaction involved in the PM/BS process and identify the intermediate oxidant
241
responsible for the reaction, stopped flow experiments were performed with
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photodiode array detection, and the resulting time-resolved absorbance spectra are
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presented in Figure 3. In all four cases, the spectrum of KMnO4 was dominant at the 26-Sep-15
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beginning (cf., reference spectra in Supporting Information, Figure S4), but its strong
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absorbance at 300-350 and 500-570 nm disappeared by about 100 ms, consistent with
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the rapid oxidation of phenol in the presence of NaHSO3. By 200 ms, a broad
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absorbance shoulder developed at < 500 nm (characteristic of colloidal MnO239) that
248
was strong for the reaction of permanganate with bisulfite alone and with a low
249
concentration of phenol (Figure 3A, B), but less strong for the high phenol
250
concentration (Figure 3C). This trend was consistent with a rapid but multi-step
251
reduction of KMnO4 to MnO2 via reactive intermediates that could be
252
scavenged/diverted by oxidizing organics (such as phenol). In the presence of
253
pyrophosphate, the generation of MnO2 was suppressed (Figure 3D), suggesting a
254
strong interaction between the reactive species and pyrophosphate.
255
A variety of reactive intermediate species might be formed in the PM/BS process,
256
one or more of which undoubtedly are responsible for the rapid oxidation of the test
257
contaminants shown in Figure 1 and 2. Plausible reactive intermediates include
258
various forms of the less stable oxidation states of Mn (VI, V, IV, and III),
259
lower-valent species of sulfur (SO3•−, SO4•−, SO5•−), and reactive oxygen species (HO•
260
etc.). Some of these species are known to oxidize organic contaminants at rates that
261
are nearly diffusion controlled (i.e., second-order rate constants, k″ ≈ 109–1010 M−1 s−1)
262
(e.g.,1, 2), although others are not as well studied. Assuming that k″ ≈ 109 M−1 s−1 is
263
representative of the specie(s) responsible for contaminant oxidation in the PM/BS
264
process, then the range of kobs measured in this study (Table 1) suggests that the total 26-Sep-15
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reactive species concentration during the measurement time period was ~0.05 to ~0.2
266
µM. Such concentrations are unrealistic for highly reactive species such as HO• and
267
SO4•−,3 suggesting that the intermediates responsible for the high rates of contaminant
268
oxidation are relatively direct products of the initial reaction between BS and PM,
269
such as sulfite radical (SO3•−) or intermediate-valence Mn species.
270
To provide direct evidence regarding the free radical species that might be
271
involved in the PM/BS process, electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy was
272
performed using 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrolin-N-oxide (DMPO) as a spin trap. The PM/BS
273
process after 2 min of reaction time and the MO/BS process after 10 min of reaction
274
time gave ESR spectra (Figure S5A, B) with hyperfine coupling constants αN = 14.53
275
and αβ-H = 16.12, which is consistent with the previously published ESR spectrum for
276
the DMPO/SO3•− adduct.40 Distinctly different spectra were obtained for HO• from
277
Fe0 activated H2O2 and for SO4•− from heat activated S2O82− (Figure S5E, and F,
278
respectively). Prior work on Mn2+/NaHSO3 process has shown that the reaction
279
proceeds via multiple chain propagation steps involving reactive sulfur species (SO3•−,
280
SO4•−, SO5•−, HSO5−, and S2O72−),41 and the ESR spectrum of this process is also
281
consistent with SO3•− (Figure S5C). Although the intensity of SO3•− peaks in the ESR
282
spectrum of the Mn2+/NaHSO3 system increased with increasing reaction time, phenol
283
added into this system disappeared negligibly in 10 min (data not shown). Thus, the
284
initial, very rapid oxidation of the test contaminants is not due to reactive sulfur
285
species obtained by Mn(II) catalyzed oxidation of NaHSO3. 26-Sep-15
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The remaining candidates for reactive intermediates that might account for the
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very fast contaminant oxidation by the PM/BS process are species of Mn(VI), Mn(V),
288
Mn(IV), and/or Mn(III). However, negligible absorbance at 660 nm (corresponding to
289
Mn(V) reported by Simandi42) and 610 nm (corresponding to Mn(VI) reported by
290
Hassan43) was observed in the process of permanganate reduction by bisulfite, as
291
shown in Figure 3. Moreover, MnO2 generated from permanganate reduction by
292
bisulfite degraded organic contaminant negligibly even in 1 s (not shown). The
293
possibilities are further narrowed by the results shown in Figure 1D, where MnO2 was
294
used in place of KMnO4. In this case, disappearance of methyl blue was > 90% in ~10
295
s, with kobs ≈ 0.3 s−1 (Table 1), which is about 3000-fold faster than methyl blue
296
oxidation by MnO2 without activation by HSO3−. Compared with permanganate, the
297
reduction rate of MnO2 is much slower implying the gradual generation of active
298
intermediates. The analogous effect of NaHSO3 on the oxidation of organic
299
contaminants by KMnO4 and MnO2 suggests that similar reactive intermediates might
300
be responsible. Considering that MnO2 is Mn(IV), reduction of Mn(IV) cannot form
301
Mn(V) or Mn(VI), and the UV absorbance corresponding to Mn(V) or Mn(VI) was
302
not detected, so Mn(III) is the only candidate among the remaining reactive
303
intermediates that the PM/BS and MO/BS processes have in common.
304
Mn(III) stabilized by complexation with PP has an absorbance peak at 258 nm
305
(Figure S4), which is commonly used in studies of the role of Mn(III) in various
306
processes.44 We used SFS to measure absorbance at 258 nm over time in the PM/BS 26-Sep-15
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process under different conditions (at pHini 5.0), and the results are shown in Figure
308
S6. In the presence of PP but without organic contaminant, the absorbance increased
309
for about 0.2 s and then leveled out at a value consistent with [Mn(III)-PP] ≈ 46.7 µM
310
(assuming a molar absorption coefficient at 258 nm = 6750 M−1 cm-1), which is in
311
reasonable agreement with the initial concentration of KMnO4 (50 µM).44 As
312
illustrated in Figure S6(B), without stabilization by PP and the presence of organic
313
contaminant, the absorbance at 258 nm increased sharply and then decreased, forming
314
a peak at ~10 ms, followed by a gradual rebound to a plateau after 0.2 s. Although the
315
molar absorptivity of Mn(III) is not known for environmentally-relevant conditions, it
316
is likely to be significantly larger than PM at 258 nm, so the peak at 10 ms most likely
317
reflects the maximum transient concentration of Mn(III). After this peak, the
318
absorbance dropped moderately, which may be ascribed to (1) the decrease in
319
permanganate concentration; (2) the greater consumption rate of Mn(III) by bisulfite
320
and disproportionation than the generation rate of Mn(III). As the reaction proceeds,
321
the observed increase in absorbance at 258 nm could be due to the generation of
322
MnO2 because of Mn(III) disproportionation.
323
We tried testing the effect of adding phenol to the results in Figure S6(B), but
324
absorbance at 258 nm from phenol and its degradation products interfered detection of
325
Mn species at this wavelength. To avoid this interference, we used 20 mM methanol,
326
and found that this suppressed the peak concentration of Mn(III) at ~10 ms and
327
lowered the absorbance at 258 nm to ~0 (Figure S6(B)). This result helps to confirm 26-Sep-15
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328
that the transient at 10 ms is from the reactive Mn intermediate and suggests that the
329
disproportionation of Mn(III) is inhibited by the excessive methanol.
330
For additional insight into the chemistry species responsible for contaminant
331
oxidation in the PM/BS process, more complete UV-vis absorbance spectra were
332
recorded after 10 min for the PM/BS and MO/BS processes (Figure 4). Both
333
processes (PM/BS and MO/BS) show predominantly the spectrum for MnO2 without
334
PP, but in the presence of PP an absorbance peak at 258 nm is evident, which is the
335
characteristic peak of Mn(III)-PP (Figure S4). In the presence of both PP and phenol,
336
the absorbance arising from Mn(III)-PP is less (Figure 4A), confirming that Mn(III)
337
initially formed in the PM/BS process oxidizes phenol more rapidly than it complexes
338
with PP, and that both reactions are faster than the disproportionation of Mn(III).
339
The competition among the reactions that consume Mn(III) evidenced by the
340
spectra in Figure 4 is further supported by the kinetic data for phenol oxidation
341
(Figure S7). With PP present, the PM/BS process oxidized phenol with kobs = 5.5±0.5
342
s−1 (Figure S7A), which is 11-fold slower than that in the absence of PP. This could
343
be ascribed to the stable pH during the reaction (which changed less than 0.1) because
344
of the buffering capacity of PP, and the competition of PP with phenol for Mn(III).
345
Mn(III)-PP oxidized phenol very slowly with kobs ≈ 0.0016 min−1 (Figure S7B),
346
which is negligible compared to the rates obtained with the PM/BS process without
347
PP (Table 1).
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348
Pathways and Stoichiometry of the PM/BS Process. Based on all of the data
349
described above, a simplified reaction scheme for contaminant oxidation by HSO3−
350
activated MnO4− is proposed in Eqs. 1-5. The initial, activation of permanganate
351
involves reduction by (bi)sulfite to form Mn(III) (Eqs. 1 and 1’). The Mn(III) is
352
rapidly transformed to Mn2+ by disproportionation (Eq 2), and competing reactions
353
with (bi)sulfite (Eqs 3 and 3’) or organic contaminants (Eq 4). Some of the residual
354
(bi)sulfite can be oxidized by oxygen (Eqs 5 and 5’) since the experiments were
355
performed open to the air.
356
2 HSO3− + MnO4− → Mn(III) + 2 OH− + 2 SO42−
(1)
357
2 SO32− + MnO4− + 2H2O →Mn(III) + 4 OH− + 2 SO42− (at high pH)
(1’)
358
2 Mn(III) + 2 H2O → Mn2+ + MnO2 + 4 H+
(2)
359
HSO3− + 2 Mn(III) + H2O → 2 Mn2+ + SO42− + 3 H+
(3)
360
SO32− + 2 Mn(III) + H2O → 2 Mn2+ + SO42− + 2 H+ (at high pH)
(3’)
361
Mn(III) + contaminant → Mn2++ products
(4)
362
2 HSO3− + O2 → 2 H+ + 2 SO42−
(5)
363
2 SO32− + O2 →2 SO42− (at high pH)
(5’)
364
Because the initial concentrations of NaHSO3 and KMnO4 were 250 and 50 µM,
365
respectively, 100 µM NaHSO3 should be consumed by the reaction with KMnO4 (Eq
366
1) and the residual NaHSO3 (slightly less than 150 µM due to the oxidation of
367
bisulfite by oxygen during the pH adjustment) should be oxidized by oxygen (Eq 5)
368
and Mn(III) (Eq 3). Thus, about 100-150 µM H+ should be generated (without 26-Sep-15
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369
considering the consumption of bisulfite during pH adjustment) if no contaminant is
370
present, so the only sinks for Mn(III) are bisulfite oxidation and/or disproportionation
371
to Mn(II) and MnO2 (following Eq 3 and Eq 2, respectively). If these stoichiometric
372
assumptions hold, the theoretical pH of the mixture at the end of reaction (starting
373
with pHini = 5.0 and without contaminant present) should be 3.8-4.0, which matches
374
the experimentally determined value of ~4.0 shown in Figure S8.
375
When an organic contaminant (e.g., phenol) is present, some of the Mn(III) will
376
be used in oxidation of the organic contaminant, leaving less Mn(III) for
377
disproportionation (Eq 2) or oxidation of bisulfite (Eq 3), so the amount of H+
378
generated should be less. The decrease of H+ generated in this process would be
379
50-100 µM if all the Mn(III) was consumed by organic contaminants, which is
380
consistent with the progressive increase in pH from 4.0 to 4.9 (equivalent to the
381
decrease in H+ concentration by 87.4 µM) with increasing the initial phenol
382
concentration from 0 to 100 µM (Figure S8A). The same effect on pH variation was
383
found in the oxidation of other contaminants by the PM/BS process (not shown),
384
which is consistent with hypothesis that pH changes during oxidation of different
385
concentrations of contaminants in the PM/BS process is mainly determined by the
386
utilization of Mn(III).
387
The above analysis of pH effects on the PM/BS reactions (Eqs 1-5) also helps to
388
explain the cause and variability in the lag phase evident in some of the kinetic data
389
shown in Figures 1-2. The lag phase observed for all three contaminants, at C0 = 5 26-Sep-15
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390
µM, in the PM/BS process at pHini 5.0 (Figure 1, A-C) likely reflects the decrease in
391
pH (to pHend ≈ 4.1, Figure S8) during this time-period and the associated increase in
392
contaminant oxidation rate. No lag phase was observed in experiments performed
393
with phenol at higher initial concentrations (25 µM) (Figure S9), because there was
394
little change from the pHini of 5.0 (Figure S8A). Experiments initiated at higher pH
395
(pHini = 6.0) gave a larger drop in pH during the reaction (Figure S8B), which resulted
396
in the most prominent lag phase (Figure 2).
397
At pHini 8.0-9.0 bisulfite was mainly present as sulfite anion. Under these
398
conditions, the oxidation of sulfite anion by permanganate (Eq 1’) and Mn(III) (Eq 3’)
399
released OH- and H+, respectively, while no protons or hydroxide ions were generated
400
in the process of sulfite oxidation by oxygen (Eq 5’). The upward pH drift in
401
experiments that started at pHini 8.0-9.0 (Figure S8B) is most likely because the
402
amount of OH- generated in Eq 1’ was larger than that of H+ generated in Eq 3’.
403
It should be noted that the PM/BS system described in this work is highly novel
404
and many aspects of the chemistry involved will require further investigation. In
405
particular, it was not feasible within the scope of this initial study to fully characterize
406
the exact form of the Mn(III) species that is responsible for the high rates of organic
407
contaminant oxidation. There is prior work that is relevant to this issue, such as that
408
conducted by Moens et al.45 and Sisley et al.,46 which reported that the first hydrolysis
409
constant of Mn(OH2)63+ is 10-0.08 in ~4 M H+, Mn2+, ClO4- at 20 oC. The reaction
410
conditions to obtain this hydrolysis constant are very different from those of this study, 26-Sep-15
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411
but while the exact form of Mn(III) under the conditions is not known, it is likely to
412
be partially hydrolyzed. Further work will be required to fully characterize the
413
speciation of Mn(III), quantify Mn(III) generation and consumption rates, determine
414
second-order rate constants for oxidation of organic contaminants oxidation by
415
Mn(III), investigate the mechanism and products of contaminant oxidation, and
416
evaluate whether secondary oxidants (e.g., •OH) are significant under any conditions.
417
Environmental Implications. This is the first time that Mn(III) with minimal
418
stabilization has been implicated in chemistry performed under environmental
419
relevant conditions or has been shown to be reactive with environmentally-relevant
420
organic contaminants. The extraordinarily fast rates of contaminant oxidation in the
421
PM/BS process described in this study suggest that “activation” of permanganate
422
might lead to a new class of advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) in water treatment.
423
The contact times required to oxidize substantial concentrations of organic
424
contaminants with activated permanganate are very short, even when compared with
425
conventional AOPs that have been optimized and validated over many years of
426
research and development. The logistics for achieving sustained and complete
427
contaminant oxidation during water treatment will be addressed in future work. The
428
reagents required for the PM/BS process are practical for engineering scale
429
applications and the ultimate products formed from the reagents are SO42- and MnO2,
430
both of which can be accommodated within conventional water treatment processes.
431
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432
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
433
Supporting Information
434
The Supporting Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications
435
website.
436
Degradation of refractory contaminants in PM/BS process, the influence of water
437
matrix on phenol decomposition, TOC removal, ESR spectra, UV-vis spectra of
438
various species, variation of absorbance at 258 nm in PM/BS process, influence of PP
439
on phenol removal kinetics, variation of pH under different conditions, degradation
440
kinetics of phenol with high concentration in PM/BS process and summary of the rate
441
constants of ciprofloxacin and phenol oxidation in various processes. This material is
442
available free of charge at http://pubs.acs.org.
443
AUTHOR INFORMATION
444
Corresponding Author
445
*Phenol: +86-21-65980956 (X.H. Guan), 503-346-3431 (P.G. Tratnyek)
446
Notes
447
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
448
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
449
This work was supported by the Major Science and Technology Program for Water
450
Pollution Control and Treatment (Grant 2012ZX07403-001), the National Natural
451
Science Foundation of China (Grant 21522704) and the Fundamental Research Funds 26-Sep-15
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452
for the Central Universities. We thank Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry
453
(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences
454
(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Peking University and Lanzhou Institute of
455
Chemical Physics (Chinese Academy of Sciences) for providing access to SFS
456
instrumentation. The authors acknowledge helpful conversations regarding the
457
interpretation of these data with Profs. Alan Stone, George Luther, Bradley Tebo,
458
Matt Jones, Ninian Blackburn, Pierre Moënne-Loccoz, and Urs von Gunten.
459
REFERENCES
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25. Sun, B.; Zhang, J.; Du, J.; Qiao, J.; Guan, X., Reinvestigation of the role of humic acid in the oxidation of phenols by permanganate. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2013, 47, (24), 14332-14340. 26. Xie, P.; Ma, J.; Fang, J.; Guan, Y.; Yue, S.; Li, X.; Chen, L., Comparison of permanganate preoxidation and preozonation on algae containing water: cell integrity, characteristics, and chlorinated disinfection byproduct formation. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2013, 47, (24), 14051-14061. 27. Jiang, J.; Pang, S.-Y.; Ma, J., Oxidation of triclosan by permanganate (Mn (VII)): Importance of ligands and in situ formed manganese oxides. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2009, 43, (21), 8326-8331. 28. Liu, J.; Zhang, X., Effect of quenching time and quenching agent dose on total organic halogen measurement. Int. J. Environ. Anal. Chem. 2013, 93, (11), 1146-1158. 29. Liu, W.; Andrews, S. A.; Stefan, M. I.; Bolton, J. R., Optimal methods for quenching H2O2 residuals prior to UFC testing. Water Res. 2003, 37, (15), 3697-3703. 30. Keen, O. S.; Dotson, A. D.; Linden, K. G., Evaluation of hydrogen peroxide chemical quenching agents following an advanced oxidation process. J. Environ. Eng. 2012, 139, (1), 137-140. 31. Perez-Benito, J. F.; Arias, C.; Amat, E., A kinetic study of the reduction of colloidal manganese dioxide by oxalic acid. J. Col. Int. Sci. 1996, 177, (2), 288–297. 32. Tartar, H. V.; Garretson, H. H., The thermodynamic ionization constants of sulfurous acid at 25° 1. J.am.chem.soc 1941. 33. Kochany, J.; Lipczynska-Kochany, E., Application of the EPR spin-trapping technique for the investigation of the reactions of carbonate, bicarbonate, and phosphate anions with hydroxyl radicals generated by the photolysis of H2O2. Chemosphere 1992, 25, (12), 1769–1782. 34. Anipsitakis, G. P.; Dionysiou, D. D.; Gonzalez, M. A., Cobalt-mediated activation of peroxymonosulfate and sulfate radical attack on phenolic compounds. implications of chloride ions. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2006, 40, (3), 1000-1007. 35. Zhang, J.; Sun, B.; Guan, X. H., Oxidative removal of bisphenol A by permanganate: Kinetics, pathways and influences of co-existing chemicals. Sep. Purif. Technol. 2013, 107, 48-53. 36. Zazo, J. A.; Mohedano, A. F.; Gilarranz, M. A.; Rodríguez, J. J.; Casas, J. A., Chemical pathway and kinetics of phenol oxidation by fenton's reagent. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2005, 39, (23), 9295-9302. 37. An, T.; Yang, H.; Li, G.; Song, W.; Cooper, W. J.; Nie, X., Kinetics and mechanism of advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) in degradation of ciprofloxacin in water. Appl. Catal. B-Environ. 2010, 94, (3), 288–294. 38. Garcia-Segura, S.; Brillas, E., Mineralization of the recalcitrant oxalic and oxamic acids by electrochemical advanced oxidation processes using a boron-doped diamond anode. Water Res. 2011, 45, (9), 2975-2984.
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39. Jiang, J.; Pang, S.; Ma, J., Role of ligands in permanganate oxidation of organics. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2010, 44, (11), 4270-4275. 40. Zamora, P. L.; Villamena, F. A., Theoretical and experimental studies of the spin trapping of inorganic radicals by 5, 5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO). 3. Sulfur dioxide, sulfite, and sulfate radical anions. J. Phys. Chem. A 2012, 116, (26), 7210-7218. 41. Connick, R. E.; Zhang, Y. X., Kinetics and mechanism of the oxidation of HSO3by O2. 2. The manganese(II)-catalyzed reaction. Inorg. Chem. 1996, 35, (16), 4613-4621. 42. Simandi, L. I.; Jaky, M.; Schelly, Z. A., Short-lived manganate(VI) and manganate(V) intermediates in the permanganate oxidation of sulfite ion. J.am. chem. Soc. 1984, 106, (22), 6866-6867. 43. Hassan, E. M.; Belal, F., Kinetic spectrophotometric determination of nizatidine and ranitidine in pharmaceutical preparations. J. Pharmaceut. Biomed. 2002, 27, (1-2), 31–38. 44. Webb, S. M.; Dick, G. J.; Bargar, J. R.; Tebo, B. M., Evidence for the presence of Mn(III) intermediates in the bacterial oxidation of Mn(II). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2005, 102, (15), 5558-5563. 45. Moens, J.; Seidel, R.; Geerlings, P.; Faubel, M.; Winter, B.; Blumberger, J., Energy levels and redox properties of aqueous Mn2+/3+ from photoemission spectroscopy and density functional molecular dynamics simulation. J. Phys. Chem. B 2010, 114, (28), 9173-9182. 46. Sisley, M. J.; Rb., J., First hydrolysis constants of hexaaquacobalt(III) and -manganese(III): Longstanding issues resolved. Inorg. Chem. 2006, 45, (26), 10758-10763.
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For “Activation of Manganese Oxidants with Bisulfite for Enhanced Oxidation of
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Organic Contaminants: The Involvement of Mn(III)” by Bo Sun, Xiaohong Guan,
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Jingyun Fang, and Paul G. Tratnyek
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1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
0.8
0.9
C/C0
0.8
0.6
0.6 0.5
0.4
0
15
30
45
60
Time (min)
0.2 0.0
A
0.00
0.6 0.4
0.7
0.6
C/C0
0.8
C/C0
0.8
0.2 0.0
0.4
0
0.06
0.09
0.12
0.015
1.0
C/C0
0.0
C/C0
C/C0
0.6
0.6 0.5 0
10
20
30
Time (min) C
0.060
Time (s)
0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5
0.4
0
20
40
60
80
Time (min)
0.2 D
0.0
0.00 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08 0.10
599
0.045
0.9
0.7
0.2
0.030
1.0
0.8
0.8
0.4
60
B
0.000
0.9
0.6
45
Time (s)
1.0
0.8
30
Time (min)
Time (s) 1.0
15
0.2 0.0
0.03
Page 28 of 32
0
3
6
9
12
15
Time (s)
600
Figure 1. Disappearance kinetics for (A) phenol, (B) ciprofloxacin, and (C) methyl blue in
601
PM/BS process; as well as (D) methyl blue by NaHSO3 activated MnO2 at pHini 5.0. The insets
602
show the corresponding degradation kinetics of contaminants by KMnO4 or MnO2 without
603
NaHSO3. Reaction conditions: [KMnO4]0 or [MnO2]0 = 50 µM, [NaHSO3]0 = 250 µM. [Test
604
Contaminants]0 = 5 µM, T = 18±2 oC.
605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613
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C/C0
1.0 0.8
0.8
pH = 5.0 1.0 0.8
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.4
0.4
0.4
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.0
0.0
0.0
pH = 4.0
0.00
0.02
0.04
0.06
0.08
1.0
0.00 0.03 0.06 0.09 0.12 0.15
Time (s)
C/C0
1.0
1.0
pH = 8.0
0.8
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.4
0.4
0.4
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.0 1.0
1.5
Time (s)
2.0
0.14
0.21
1.0
0.8
0.5
0.07
0.28
Time (s)
0.8
0.0
614
0.00
Time (s) pH = 7.0
0.0
pH = 6.0
pH = 9.0
0.0 0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
Time (s)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
Time (s)
615
Figure 2. Disappearance kinetics for of phenol by NaHSO3 activated KMnO4 at different initial
616
pH levels. Reaction conditions: [KMnO4]0 = 50 µM, [NaHSO3]0 = 250 µM, [Phenol]0 = 5 µM.
617
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0.10
0.10
A
0.06
0.06 0.04
0.04 0.02
0.02
0.00
0.00 400
400
m) λ (n
600 700 1.0
0.8
0.4
0.6
0.2
m) λ (n
500
500 600 700 1.0
) Time (s
0.10
0.06
0.06
Abs
0.08
Abs
0.8
0.6
0.04
0.4
0.2
) Time (s
0.10
C
0.08
D
0.04
0.02
0.02
0.00
0.00
400
400
m) λ (n
m) λ (n
500 600 700 1.0
0.8
0.6
) T ime (s
618
B
Abs
0.08
Abs
0.08
Page 30 of 32
0.4
0.2
500 600 700 1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
Time (s)
619
Figure 3. The evolution of three dimensional UV-visible spectra in the process of NaHSO3
620
activated KMnO4 at pHini 5.0 (A) without phenol; (B) [Phenol]0 = 5.0 µM; (C) [Phenol]0 = 50
621
µM; (D) without phenol but [PP]0 = 5 mM. Reaction conditions: [KMnO4]0 = 50 µM;
622
[NaHSO3]0 = 250 µM.
623
28
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Environmental Science & Technology
A
.8
PP: 0 mM, Phenol: 0 µM PP: 5 mM, Phenol: 0 µM PP: 5 mM, Phenol 50 µM
Abs
.6
.4
.2
0.0 200
300
400
500
600
700
.8
B (1) PP: 0 mM (2) PP: 5 mM (2) - x(1)
.6
Abs
800
.4
.2
0.0 200
300
400
500
600
700
800
Wavelength (nm)
624 625
Figure 4. (A) Influence of PP and phenol on the UV-visible spectrum of the products generated
626
in the PS process at pHini 5.0; (B) Influence of PP on the UV-visible spectrum of the products
627
generated in the MnO2/NaHSO3 process at pHini 5.0. The line (1) represents the absorption of
628
MnO2 and line (2) represents the absorption of MnO2 and Mn(III)-PP, x was a coefficient used to
629
subtract the absorption of MnO2 from line (2). Reaction conditions: [KMnO4]0 or [MnO2]0 = 50
630
µM; [NaHSO3]0 = 250 µM; T=18±2 0C.
631
29
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ACS Paragon Plus Environment
635
634
oxidant
KMnO4
KMnO4
KMnO4
KMnO4
KMnO4
KMnO4
KMnO4
KMnO4
MnO2
Phenol
Phenol
Phenol
Phenol
Phenol
Phenol
Ciprofloxacin
Methyl blue
Methyl blue
5.0
5.0
5.0
9.0
8.0
7.0
6.0
5.0
4.0
pH
0.29±0.03
80.7±3.3
147±9
1.3±0.08
1.2±0.09
3.9±0.05
25.8±3.4
62.4±0.8
119.8±2.8
k1 (s )
-1
with NaHSO3
30
6.9 × 10 4 4.8 × 10 5 9.35 × 105 4.9 × 10 3 1.0× 10 3 6.0× 10 2 1.5 × 10 6 3.6 × 10 5 3.0 × 10 3
1.30±0.07 × 10 -4 2.76±0.85 × 10 -5 7.91±0.99 × 10 -4 1.20±0.03 × 10 -3 2.17±0.07 × 10 -3 9.50±0.08 × 10 -5 2.22±0.20 × 10 -4 9.50±1.33 × 10 -5
k1/k2
1.72±0.35 × 10 -3
k2 (s )
-1
without NaHSO3
= 50 µM; [NaHSO3]0 = 250 µM; [Test Contaminants]0 = 5.0 µM)
633
Contaminants
Table 1 Influence of NaHSO3 on the rate constants of contaminants oxidation by KMnO4 or MnO2 at pHini 5.0 ([KMnO4]0 or [MnO2]0
632
Environmental Science & Technology Page 32 of 32