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Remediation and Control Technologies
Dechlorination of Excess Trichloroethene by Bimetallic and Sulfidated Nanoscale Zero-Valent Iron Feng He, Zhenjie Li, Shasha Shi, Wenqiang Xu, Hanzhen Sheng, Yawei Gu, Yonghai Jiang, and Beidou Xi Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b01735 • Publication Date (Web): 28 Jun 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on June 29, 2018
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Dechlorination of Excess Trichloroethene by Bimetallic and
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Sulfidated Nanoscale Zero-Valent Iron
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Feng He1, 2*, Zhenjie Li1, Shasha Shi1, Wenqiang Xu1, Hanzhen Sheng1,
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Yawei Gu1, Yonghai Jiang3, 4, Beidou Xi3, 4 1
5
College of Environment, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310014, China
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2
Key Laboratory of Microbial Technology for Industrial Pollution Control of Zhejiang Province, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310014, China
8 9
3
State Key Laboratory of Environmental Criteria and Risk Assessment, Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences, Beijing 100012, China
10 11
4
State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Simulation and Control of
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Groundwater Pollution, Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences,
13
Beijing 100012, China
14
*Corresponding author: Feng He
15
Email:
[email protected], Phone: 86-571-88871509
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Keywords: TCE, Dechlorination, Sulfidation, Bimetallic, Catalyst,
17
Electron Efficiency, Selectivity, Zero-Valent Iron, Nanoparticles
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06/28/2018
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Graphical Abstract
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Abstract
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Nanoscale zero valent iron (nZVI) likely finds its application in source zone
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remediation. Two approaches to modify nZVI have been reported: bimetal (Fe-Me)
27
and sulfidated nZVI (S-nZVI). However, previous researches have primarily focused
28
on enhancing particle reactivity with these two modifications under more plume-like
29
conditions. In this study, we systematically compared the TCE dechlorination
30
pathway, rate and electron selectivity of Fe-Me (Me: Pd, Ni, Cu and Ag), S-nZVI, and
31
nZVI with excess TCE simulating source zone conditions. TCE dechlorination on
32
Fe-Me was primarily via hydrogenolysis while that on S-nZVI and nZVI was mainly
33
via β-elimination. The surface-area normalized TCE reduction rate (k’SA) of Fe-Pd,
34
S-nZVI, Fe-Ni, Fe-Cu, and Fe-Ag were ~ 6,800, 190, 130, 20, and 8-fold greater than
35
nZVI. All bimetallic modification enhanced the competing hydrogen evolution
36
reaction (HER) while sulfidation inhibited HER. Fe-Cu and Fe-Ag negligibly
37
enhanced electron utilization efficiency (εe) while Fe-Pd, Fe-Ni and S-nZVI
38
dramatically increased εe from 2% to ~ 100%, 69% and 72%, respectively. Adsorbed
39
atomic hydrogen was identified to be responsible for the TCE dechlorination on
40
Fe-Me but not on S-nZVI. The enhanced dechlorination rate along with the reduced
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HER of S-nZVI can be explained by that FeS conducting major electrons mediated
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TCE dechlorination while Fe oxides conducting minor electrons mediated HER.
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Introduction
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In the last two decades, nanoscale zero-valent iron (nZVI) has been demonstrated to
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be an effective and promising alternative for in-situ remediation of contaminated
46
groundwater and soil due to its strong reductive capability (Fe2+ + 2e- → Fe(s), E0 =
47
-0.44 V).1-7 Furthermore, the nanoscale particle size allows nZVI to be injected into
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the source zones (after modified with polymers or surfactants) and attack chlorinated
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compounds or other pollutants before they spread out in the aquifer, which is crucial
50
for in situ remediation.5,
51
considerable large surface area compared with microscale or millimeter ZVI that are
52
typically
53
implementation of nZVI still faces challenges.6, 21 Particularly, the reactivity of bare
54
nZVI may be still unsatisfactory for source zone or “hot spot” remediation.21, 22 In
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addition, nZVI injected into groundwater will be easily passivated by an iron oxide or
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hydroxide film produced during iron corrosion process,19, 20, 23-25 thereby losing its
57
reactivity merit.
used
in
8-17
nZVI also showed enhanced reactivity due to its
permeable
reactive
barriers
(PRBs).18-20
However,
the
58
To date, a variety of approaches to enhance the reactivity of nZVI for pollutant
59
degradation have been explored.5, 26-31 The most used approach involves addition of a
60
secondary metal to form iron-based bimetallic nanoparticles especially Fe-Pd,22, 32-38
61
Fe-Ni,39-43 Fe-Cu,44,
62
nanoparticles especially Fe-Pd degraded organic halides more completely into
63
halogen-free products with reaction rates several orders of magnitude higher than bare
64
nZVI under anoxic and excess iron conditions.29,
45
and Fe-Ag.46,
47
Researches showed that bimetallic
32, 48
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bimetallic particles was generally attributed to (1) the deposition of transition or noble
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metals (e.g., Pd, Ni, Cu, and Ag) formed galvanic couple with nZVI, which
67
accelerates the electron transfer from Fe(0) core to metal additive on nZVI surface,39,
68
44, 49
and (2) the metal additive catalyzes hydrodechlorination reaction.37, 39
69
It should be noted that although numerous works have been done on
70
dechlorination of chlorinated compounds by different types of bimetallic particles, the
71
reaction pathway and mechanism remain elusive and sometimes contradictory.37-39,
72
49-51
73
proposed to control the hydrodechlorination reactivity of bimetallic ZVI particles
74
based on a nice correlation between the solubility of atomic hydrogen within each
75
additive and 1,1,1-TCA reduction rates.31 However, recent studies on electrocatalytic
76
hydrodechlorination of 2,4-dichlorophenol on Pd nanoparticles suggested that
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adsorbed atomic hydrogen was the active species while absorbed atomic hydrogen
78
was inert.51 Besides, bimetallic modification accelerates electron transfer from Fe(0)
79
to not only contaminants but also H2O/H+ to promote molecular hydrogen evolution
80
reaction (HER) and would shorten the lifetime of bimetallic particles.21, 52, 53 The
81
selectivity of electrons from Fe(0) for contaminants over H2O/H+ can be defined as
82
efficiency of electron utilization, which has been growingly recognized as the most
83
challenging aspect of ZVI performance.21, 53-55 However, the HER rates along with the
84
efficiency of electron utilization (as well as dechlorination capacity) for iron-based
85
bimetallic particles have not been investigated/quantified.
For example, atomic hydrogen absorbed in the lattice of metal additives was
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In recent years, another modification of nZVI, sulfidation of nZVI to form
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secondary iron sulfide phases, has gained significant attention.21, 28, 56-65 The sulfidated
88
nZVI (S-nZVI) can not only enhance the rates of dechlorination but also improve the
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electron selectivity of nZVI for contaminant reduction.28, 57, 61, 65, 66 These benefits
90
have been observed with S-nZVI produced through different approaches, for example
91
the so-called “one-pot” S-nZVI produced by reduction of ferrous iron with
92
borohydride in the presence of dithionite56 and the “two-step” S-nZVI produced by
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adding the sulfidation agents (e.g., sodium sulfide and thiosulfate) after nZVI
94
synthesis.57, 60 After sulfidation, the rate of TCE dechlorination by nZVI increased by
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~ 60-fold while H2 production was prohibited.60 However, the electron utilization
96
efficiency of nZVI was scarcely quantified except for that of carboxymethyl cellulose
97
stabilized S-nZVI, which was determined to be more than 95%.61 In addition,
98
although a few studies have explored the mechanism of the concurrent enhancement
99
of contaminant reduction and selectivity of S-nZVI,56, 57, 60 it remains elusive. One
100
explanation was that the iron sulfide on nZVI surface is more hydrophobic (i.e., it has
101
higher binding ability for organic contaminants than H2O/H+)56 and a more efficient
102
electron conductor than iron (hydr)oxides on bare nZVI.53, 57, 65, 67 However, some
103
researchers believe that sulfur in S-nZVI poisoned atomic hydrogen recombination,
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which favored the contaminant reduction by atomic hydrogen.60 The pre-hypothesis of
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this explanation is that atomic hydrogen mediates TCE dechlorination on S-nZVI,
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which may not be applied.
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As both the bimetallic and sulfidation modifications are being or to be practiced
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in field nZVI implementation, it is important to compare these two approaches
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systematically under same conditions, which has not been done so far. In addition,
110
nZVI has relatively high cost and is likely to be used in source zone remediation (i.e.,
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excess TCE conditions). Such scenario was not typically considered in previous
112
studies. The overall objective of this study was to comprehensively compare not only
113
the reaction rate and pathway of TCE dechlorination by bimetallic and sulfidated
114
nZVI but also the selectivity and dechlorination capacity of both particles under
115
source zone conditions. The mechanisms of how bimetallic and sulfidated
116
modifications cause the change of dechlorination rate and selectivity were also
117
explored and compared. To the best of our knowledge, this represents one of the first
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trials of looking at all typical nZVI modifications together. The “excess TCE” used in
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this study also facilitated the investigation of reaction pathway as they competed
120
reaction sites and allowed the accumulation of short-life reaction intermediates.
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Materials and Methods
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Chemicals. Details of the used chemicals are provided in Supporting Information
123
(SI).
124
Particle Preparation and Characterization. The nZVI particles were synthesized by
125
borohydride method adapted from Liu et al.19 The iron-based bimetallic and sulfidated
126
nanoparticles were synthesized by adding salts solution of each additive or Na2S into
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nZVI suspension and allowed for 15-min reaction under sonication and anoxic
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conditions. The metal additive/Fe and S/Fe molar ratio was typically 0.27 mol% and
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20 mol%, respectively. The use of high S/Fe ratio in S-nZVI was due to that S is
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environmentally safe and such ratio is likely to be used in practical application to
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ensure high reactivity of S-nZVI.60 More details regarding the particle synthesis is
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provided in SI.
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The physical properties of nZVI, bimetals (Fe-Me), and S-nZVI particle were
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characterized using a set of crystallographic, microscopic, and surface chemistry
135
methods including X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM),
136
high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR-TEM) with selected area
137
electron diffraction (SAED) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS).
138
Reaction Systems. TCE dechlorination was tested under excess TCE conditions
139
(TCE: 2.28 mM, particle concentration: 0.25 g/L) unless otherwise mentioned to
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represent low iron to TCE ratios that might arise during treatment of a source zone.
141
Carbon balance of the TCE dechlorination experiments ranged from 80% to 105%.
142
Details regarding the batch experiments and chemical analyses for TCE degradation
143
and H2 generation are provided in SI. TCE dechlorination by carboxymethyl cellulose
144
stabilized Pd (CMC-Pd) nanoparticles in the presence of H2 at varied concentrations
145
was also performed for mechanism study purpose and the details are provided in SI.
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Particle Efficiencies. Two types of particle efficiencies for the anoxic ZVI-TCE-H2O
147
system, defined in our previous work,53 were quantified. One is Fe(0) efficiency
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(εFe(0)), which is the molar fraction of Fe(0) accessible to TCE or H2O. The other is the
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from Fe(0) that are used for TCE reduction. Details regarding their calculation are
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provided in SI.
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Results and Discussion
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Particle Characterization. SEM images (Figure S1A, B) show spherical shape for
154
both nZVI and S-nZVI particles. HR-TEM images (Figure S2) further demonstrate
155
the core-shell structure of the spherical nZVI, Fe-Me, and S-nZVI with shell thickness
156
of 3~6 nm. The absence of lattice fringes and diffuse rings in SAED patterns of nZVI
157
(Figure 1A) suggests that nZVI particles were highly disordered, while the clear spots
158
and sharp rings in SAED patterns of S-nZVI (Figure 1A) indicate multiple
159
crystallinity of S-nZVI particles. The crystallinity of nZVI and S-nZVI was further
160
demonstrated by the XRD patterns (Figure 1A). No diffraction peaks of iron oxides
161
and only broad peak of α-Fe0 were detected for nZVI, suggesting its poorly ordered
162
crystallinity, while the presence of mackinawite (FeS), greigite (Fe3S4), and pyrrhotite
163
(Fe7S8) peaks in S-nZVI conformed to the multiple crystallinity of S-nZVI particles.
164
For Fe-Me, bimetallic modification did not change the crystallinity nature of nZVI
165
and second metals (i.e., Pd, Ni, Cu, and Ag) were not detected by XRD (also not
166
observed by TEM) due to their low loading (Figure S3).
167
The high resolution Fe2p XPS spectra for nZVI and S-nZVI are shown in Figure
168
S4A and S4B, respectively. Fitting these peaks gave the distribution of iron oxidation
169
states summarized in Figure 1B. The results show that Fe0 was only present on the
170
surface of S-nZVI, suggesting that sodium sulfide can etch the iron (hydr)oxide film
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on nZVI to form iron sulfides and expose the Fe0 core that was otherwise completely
172
covered in pristine nZVI. This is also supported in this case by the decrease of oxygen
173
content in S-nZVI compared to nZVI (Figure 1C). The S 2p spectrum of S-nZVI in
174
Figure 1D fitted with doublets representing 2p1/2 and 2p3/2 suggests that the surface of
175
S-nZVI consisted predominately S2- (56%) and Sn2- (44%), which is consistent with
176
previous studies56,
177
characterization of S-nZVI. For Fe-Me, bimetallic modification did not cause obvious
178
change of nZVI surface in terms of Fe0 exposure and Fe(II)/Fe(III) ratio (Figure S5A).
179
The detected Me/Fe molar ratio on the surface was ~ 4.5 mol% for all four bimetals
180
(Figure S5B) and Me valences were zero (data not shown), which indicates that Me
181
deposited on nZVI surface in elemental form for all Fe-Me. The BET surface area of
182
nZVI was 16 m2/g. Bimetallic modification and sulfidation increased the BET surface
183
area to 20±1 and 23 m2/g (Table S2), respectively, likely due to the formation of more
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dispersed second metal or Fe sulfide phases on the surface. Lines
57, 60
and also validates the results from SAED and XRD
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Figure 1. (A) XRD patterns of nZVI and S-nZVI (S/Fe = 20 mol%). The insets are the corresponding SAED images; (B) Molar fraction of Fe(0), Fe(II), and Fe(III) in nZVI and S-nZVI derived from fitting of XPS Fe 2p spectra; (C) Molar fraction of Fe, O, and S content in nZVI and S-nZVI. There was about 10% of B in the particles; (D) S 2p XPS spectra of S-nZVI. The particles were aged by naturally diffused air for 12 h after dried in argon before characterization.
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Reaction Products and Pathways. The formation and distribution of major products
194
at the end of TCE reduction (8 days) by Fe-Me, S-nZVI, and nZVI are summarized in
195
Figure 2A. Chlorinated intermediates (particularly 1,1-DCE and cis-DCE) were
196
observed with all Fe-Me particles while they were almost absent in nZVI and S-nZVI
197
systems. In contrast, significant amount of acetylene was observed with nZVI (20% of
198
the final products) and S-nZVI (70% of the final products) while it was absent in all
199
Fe-Me systems. It suggests that hydrogenolysis was the major dechlorination pathway
200
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on nZVI and S-nZVI. The detection of ethane and coupling products in all iron
202
systems further suggests that hydrogenation and coupling reactions also occurred. The
203
more significant accumulation of chlorinated intermediates with Fe-Cu and Fe-Ag
204
than Fe-Pd and Fe-Ni is a result of their lower dechlorination reactivity as shown in
205
Figure 3. The larger accumulation of acetylene with S-nZVI than nZVI suggests that
206
the particle reactivity of S-nZVI is controlled by sulfidated iron phases, consistent
207
with our recent report on TCE reduction by mechanochemically sulfidated
208
micro-scale ZVI.53
A
as % of products
100 80 60
CPs C 2H 2
40
C 2H 4 C 2H 6
20
C4,C6 C3,C5
0 Fe-Pd Fe-Ni Fe-Cu Fe-Ag S-nZVI nZVI
209
210 211 212 213 214 215
Figure 2. Product distribution at the end of TCE dechlorination (8 days) by Fe-Me, S-nZVI, and nZVI (CPs represents chlorinated products) (A) and proposed reaction pathways of TCE dechlorination on Fe-Pd or Fe-Ni (B) and S-nZVI (C). Only stable reaction intermediates are shown. Numbers correspond to rate constants (k1 to k4) in Table S3.
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The final steps of the TCE dechlorination was further characterized with batch
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experiments by either adding ethene to Fe-Me or adding acetylene and ethene to nZVI
218
and S-nZVI. Both Fe-Pd and Fe-Ni rapidly and completely transformed ethene to
219
ethane (Figure S6A, B) while Fe-Cu and Fe-Ag produced trace ethane (Figure S6C,
220
D). The results suggest a reaction pathway of TCE hydrogenolysis to chlorinated
221
intermediates, then to ethene followed by its hydrogenation to ethane on Fe-Me
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especially on Fe-Pd and Fe-Ni. Yet, the generation of ethane and coupling products
223
was concurrent with chlorinated intermediates and ethene in Fe-Me (Figure 3), which
224
suggests another pathway of direct transformation of TCE to ethane and coupling
225
products before their desorption from particle surface. TCE dechlorination on Fe-Me
226
involving sorption, reduction (hydrogenolysis, hydrogenation and coupling processes)
227
and desorption processes is summarized in Figure S7. The sorption of TCE on Me
228
was first via C=C through π bond (physical adsorption) followed by forming di-δ
229
bond with Me surface (chemical adsorption).30, 68-73 It is noteworthy that the strength
230
of TCE sorption on Me somehow controls the product distribution.39 For example, Ni
231
facilitates the breaking of C=C bond while Pd does not,39,
232
formation of higher fraction of ethane and odd-numbered coupling products during
233
TCE dechlorinaton by Fe-Ni compared to Fe-Pd. For the convenience of kinetic
234
modeling, the TCE dechlorination pathway on Fe-Pd and Fe-Ni is simplified in
235
Figure 2B without including the negligible chlorinated intermediates.
72
which explains the
236
Both S-nZVI and nZVI transformed acetylene to ethene, ethane and longer chain
237
hydrocarbons (C3-C6) (Figure S8A, B). However, both particles were not able to 13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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transform ethene to ethane (Figure S8C, D). Therefore, the dechlorination of TCE on
239
S-nZVI and nZVI was via β-elimination to form acetylene followed by its
240
hydrogenation to form ethene, ethane and coupling products in parallel, as
241
summarized in Figure 2C. The results are consistent with previous studies on the
242
pathway of TCE dechlorination by sulfidated nanoscale or microscale ZVI.53, 60 It
243
should be noted that some previous studies also reported reduction of ethene to ethane
244
by ZVI.69 The underlying mechanism for this difference is unclear but may relate to
245
different types/sources of ZVI used in these studies.
246 247
Reaction Kinetics. The kinetics of TCE dechlorination by Fe-Ni (Figure 3B) and
248
S-nZVI (Figure 3E) were well described by a model containing zero-order terms for
249
reaction steps shown in Figure 2. The fitted rate constants of each reaction step (k1-k4)
250
and TCE disappearance (kTCE) are given in Table S3. Zero-order kinetics with high
251
dose of contaminants has been observed previously with ZVIs, rationalized as the
252
effect of site saturation, and modeled with Langmuir-Hinshelwood-Hougen-Watson
253
(or apparent zero-order) kinetics.19, 53, 69 However, the TCE dechlorination by Fe-Pd
254
was more consistent with first-order kinetics (Figure 3A). This may be because Fe-Pd
255
degraded the adsorbed TCE fast enough to leave the sites unsaturated. The kinetics of
256
TCE reduction by Fe-Cu, Fe-Ag, and nZVI were not modeled because there was no
257
sufficient degradation of TCE (< 3%) in the tested time period (8 days) (Figure 3C, D,
258
and F). In this case, initial TCE reduction rates (kTCE) were determined by fitting the
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product generation data to zero-order kinetics. The resultant rate constants normalized
260
by BET surface area of all nZVI-based particles are summarized in Table S3.
261 262 263 264 265 266 267
Figure 3. Kinetics of TCE dechlorination and formation of major products by Fe-Pd (A), Fe-Ni (B), Fe-Cu (C), Fe-Ag (D), S-nZVI (E) and nZVI (F) under excess TCE conditions (Me/Fe = 0.27 mol%, S/Fe = 20 mol%). CPs represents chlorinated products. Smooth curves on (A), (B) and (E) are calculated from the kinetic model with rate constants in Table S3. Connecting lines on (C), (D) and (F) are only interpolated. All experiments at pH 8 buffered by 25 mM HEPES and under anoxic conditions.
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Pristine nZVI barely transformed TCE due to that the as-synthesized particles
270
(without acid pre-treatment) did not expose any Fe0 according to XPS results. Both
271
the bimetallic and sulfidated modification increased the reaction rate (kSA) of TCE
272
dechlorination for at least one-order magnitude. If the initial TCE dechlorination rate
273
by Fe-Pd was also estimated using zero-order kinetics, the rates follow an order of
274
Fe-Pd > S-nZVI > Fe-Ni >> Fe-Cu > Fe-Ag (Table S3 and Table S4), which are ~
275
6,800, 190, 130, 20 and 8-fold higher than that of nZVI, respectively. Previous
276
research reported a 2-order magnitude faster TCE dechlorination rate by nZVI under
277
excess TCE conditions,19 which may be due to that their nZVI particles were
278
synthesized in methanol/water phase and had a much higher Fe0 content of 97%. It
279
should be noted that much higher S/Fe molar ratio was used than Me/Fe in bimetals.
280
At same S/Fe and Me/Fe ratio (0.27 mol%), the reaction rate of S-nZVI became lower
281
than that of Fe-Ni but still higher than those of Fe-Cu and Fe-Ag, as shown in Figure
282
S9. In addition, the reduction of TCE by Fe-Pd, Fe-Ni, and S-nZVI did not show any
283
indication of decreased reactivity before the end of reaction, suggesting iron corrosion
284
did not cause passivation of reactive sites.
285
H2 Evolution. Time series data for HER by Fe-Me, S-nZVI and nZVI in the absence
286
and presence of excess TCE are shown in Figure 4A and 4B, respectively. Without
287
TCE, all the deposited metal accelerated HER in varying degrees despite of same
288
additive loading, and the Fe0 in all bimetals exhausted in 7 days (longevity of Fe-Pd,
289
Fe-Ni ~ 5 days, Fe-Cu, Fe-Ag ~ 7 days) while only ~ 50% Fe0 in nZVI was consumed.
290
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generated at 24 h divided by the time, the particle mass concentration and the surface
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area, ranged from 18 µmol·L·m-2·h-1 (Fe-Ag) to 49 µmol·L·m-2·h-1 (Fe-Pd), which
293
were ~3 to 9-fold higher than that of nZVI. In addition, the corrosion of nZVI was
294
nearly completely passivated after ~1 month (Figure S10). These results indicate that
295
bimetallic modification shortened the longevity of nZVI particles.
296 297 298 299 300 301 302
Figure 4. Hydrogen evolution in the absence (A) and presence (B) of excess TCE (Fe: 0.25 g/L). The relationship of corrosion currents of Fe-Me v.s. initial HER rates (C) and the standard Gibbs energy of adsorption of hydrogen on Me surfaces (∆GH ) v.s. initial HER rates (D). The flat line on (C) is a base line according to kH2 of nZVI. Connecting lines on (D) are only interpolated. All experiments at pH 8 buffered by 25 mM HEPES and under anoxic conditions.
303
In contrast, S-nZVI significantly inhibited iron corrosion. The initial HER rate of
304
S-nZVI (4.7 µmol·L·m-2·h-1) was comparable to that of nZVI, however, it slowed
305
down significantly thereafter and H2 evolution completely stopped after 7 days. The
306
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in the particles, which suggests that the majority of Fe0 was preserved and therefore
308
the particle longevity was extended.
309
With excess TCE present, hydrogen evolution with Fe-Pd exhibited a volcano
310
curve, where H2 evolution reached a peak of 3% as initial Fe0 at 2 h, and then
311
gradually vanished along with TCE dechlorination (Figure 4B and Figure S11). This
312
suggests that the generated H2 was utilized for further reduction of TCE, in agreement
313
with the known ability of Pd in catalyzing H2 for hydrodechlorination.74-76 For Fe-Ni
314
and S-nZVI, the H2 evolution rate decreased with time and H2 generation leveled off
315
after 24 h at 19% and 9% of the added Fe0, respectively. The absence of a volcano
316
pattern for Fe-Ni and S-nZVI as well as Fe-Cu and Fe-Ag suggests all these particles
317
didn’t catalyze TCE reduction by H2. This is verified with experiments performed
318
with headspace purged with pure H2, which did not result in increased TCE
319
dechlorination (Figure S12). However, for Fe-Ni, when the Ni/Fe ratio was increased
320
to 20 mol%, the increased TCE dechlorination was significant with H2 headspace
321
(Figure S13), which suggests the ability of Ni in catalyzing H2 at high concentration.
322
The much lower H2 evolution with Fe-Pd, Fe-Ni and S-nZVI in the presence of excess
323
TCE suggests that a larger portion of the reducing equivalents of Fe0 were consumed
324
by TCE due to either TCE competing electrons with H+ (e.g., Fe-Pd, Fe-Ni, and
325
S-nZVI) or the utilization of the generated H2 (e.g. Fe-Pd).
326
It is widely agreed that the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) occurred in two
327
key steps.77-81 First is the Volmer reaction (H+ + e- + Me → Me-Hads), which involved
328
the electron transfer to proton on the surface of electron conductors such as Me to 18 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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form adsorbed atomic hydrogen, then followed by the second step of atomic hydrogen
330
combination and desorption: (2a) Tafel reaction (Me-Hads + Me-Hads → 2Me + H2) or
331
(2b) Heyrovsky reaction (Me-Hads + H+ + e- → Me + H2). For corrosion of pristine and
332
all modified nZVI particles, the corrosion currents of nZVI and each modified nZVI
333
particles (Table S5) can be obtained by fitting the Tafel curves of electrodes modified
334
by each particle type (Figure S14). Both doping nZVI with a second metal and
335
sulfidation increased corrosion current and therefore enhanced electron transfer from
336
Fe0 to the surface. The cause of this increase for Fe-Me is the galvanic effect while
337
that for S-nZVI is the increased electron conductivity of FeS compared to iron
338
oxides.53, 82 However, the initial HER rates of Fe-Me are not linear to their corrosion
339
currents (Figure 4C). For example, the corrosion current of Fe-Ni was about 2-fold
340
higher than that of Fe-Cu, however, their initial HER rates were comparable. This
341
suggests that HER is not just controlled by electron transfer. Interestingly, the plot of
342
HER rates v.s. standard Gibbs energy of adsorption of hydrogen on each material
343
surface (∆GH, Table S6) shows a volcano curve that is typical for electrochemical
344
HER (Figure 4D).83-85 This pattern is explained by that too weak binding of atomic
345
hydrogen with Cu and Ag made the proton/electron-transfer step thermodynamically
346
unfavorable while too strong binding of atomic hydrogen with Ni restricted their
347
combination to release hydrogen.86
348 349
Efficiencies and Dechlorination Capacity. In the presence of excess TCE, almost no
350
Fe0 remained in all residual particles except pristine nZVI after reaction, suggesting
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351
that Fe0 in all modified nZVIs was accessible (i.e, εFe(0) was ~100%). This also
352
suggests that the iron (oxyhydr)oxide layer on Fe-Me and S-nZVI surfaces did not
353
become passivating enough to prevent electron transport across this layer to either
354
TCE or H2O (at pH 8 and other conditions of these experiments). In contrast, the εe of
355
each particle type varied significantly. While εe of nZVI, Fe-Cu, and Fe-Ag were < 4%,
356
εe of Fe-Pd, Fe-Ni, and S-nZVI were at least one order magnitude higher. The εe of
357
Fe-Pd was ~100%, which suggests that all the electrons were utilized by TCE either
358
directly or indirectly (i.e., via forming ·H first and then being utilized). However,
359
under field conditions the generated H2 would diffuse away and the εe may become
360
lower. The εe of Fe-Ni lying at 69% was lower than that of S-nZVI (72%), consistent
361
with the lower H2 evolution of S-nZVI. Nonetheless, the εe difference between Fe-Ni
362
and S-nZVI was not as dramatic as their difference in HER rates in the absence of
363
TCE but comparable to their rate difference in degrading TCE. Therefore, the most
364
important cause of the high εe of Fe-Ni, Fe-Pd and S-nZVI compared to nZVI under
365
excess TCE conditions was that they reacted with TCE much faster, which created
366
selectivity.
367
The overall capacity of each particle type to reduce TCE depends on not only
368
particle efficiencies but also the products formed from TCE dechlorination. The molar
369
numbers of electrons required to convert 1 mole TCE to corresponding products (n)
370
for all particles are provided in Table 1. The n of nZVI was higher than those of
371
Fe-Cu and Fe-Ag but lower than those of Fe-Pd and Fe-Ni. This is due to that Cu and
372
Ag modification caused the accumulation of chlorinated products while Pd and Ni 20 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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modification led to formation of more reduced products (i.e., ethene and ethane). In
374
particular, Fe-Ni had the highest n as it converted most TCE to ethane. The n of
375
S-nZVI was lower than bimetals due to the formation of less saturated products (i.e.,
376
acetylene) by S-nZVI (Table 1). These results imply that if particle efficiencies are
377
the same, S-nZVI can dechlorinate about 20%~40% more TCE than bimetallic
378
particles. If we assume that the εe obtained from the batch experiments with excess
379
TCE is applicable to a source zone condition in field implementation, the mass of
380
TCE dechlorinated per unit mass of Fe0 in S-nZVI can be estimated to be 5.7 mmol/g
381
Fe0 (Table 1). The higher dechlorination capacity of S-nZVI over bimetals (5.2, 3.2,
382
0.2, 0.15 mmol/g Fe0 for Fe-Pd, Fe-Ni, Fe-Cu, and Fe-Ag, respectively) and nZVI
383
(0.13 mmol/g Fe0, Table 1) is a significant advantage of S-nZVI in groundwater
384
remediation. The calculated dechlorination capacity may be overestimated due to that
385
the contact between particles and contaminants may become a limiting factor for
386
dechlorination under field conditions. Nonetheless, polymers such as CMC coated on
387
nZVI to enhance particle transport would also stimulate microbial activity in field
388
applications, which may provide significantly more electrons.13, 87, 88
389
390
391
392
393
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Table 1. Efficiencies and Capacities of Fe-Me, S-nZVI, and Pristine nZVI Particles under Excess TCE Conditions.
n
Fe0 utilization
Electron efficiency
efficiency (εp, %)
(εe, %)
mmol of TCE dechlorinated per g of Fe0
Fe-Pd
6.5
99.8
99.9
5.2
Fe-Ni
7.6
99.9
69
3.2
Fe-Cu
6
99.8
3.3
0.2
Fe-Ag
5.6
99.7
2.3
0.15
S-nZVI
4.5
99.9
72
5.7
nZVI
6.5
-
2.4
0.13
396
Mechanisms of Enhanced Reactivity and Selectivity of Fe-Me and S-nZVI. On
397
the basis of corrosion currents obtained from Tafel characterization, bimetallic
398
modification enhanced electron transfer particularly to Me surface due to galvanic
399
effect. Yet, this increase did not result in proportional increase of HER rate due to that
400
HER was also affected by the binding energy of Me-H. For TCE dechlorination, the
401
rate could be further affected by the binding strength of Me-TCE. In order to link the
402
HER rate and TCE dechlorination rate, we investigated the TCE dechlorination by
403
modified nZVIs under excess iron conditions, where HER and TCE dechlorination
404
processes did not affect each other (Figure S15). We found a strong correlation
405
between HER rates and TCE dechlorination rates for the investigated Fe-Me (linear
406
fitting, R2 = 0.97, Figure 5A). This suggests that HER and TCE dechlorination on the
407
tested Fe-Me are controlled by same reaction steps, and Me-TCE binding is not an
408
important factor for TCE dechlorination. Since HER of Fe-Me is mainly a result of
409
combination of adsorbed atomic hydrogen (·Hads) on Me surface due to galvanic
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410
effect, TCE dechlorination should also be mediated by ·Hads on Me surface. Schrick et
411
al.39 also proposed that atomic hydrogen was responsible for TCE dechlorination by
412
Fe-Ni but no attempts were made to distinguish whether it was ·Hads or absorbed
413
atomic hydrogen (·Habs). Some later studies suggested that ·Habs into lattice of metal
414
additives controlled the hydrodechlorination reactivity of bimetallic ZVI particles.31, 37,
415
48
416
To elucidate whether ·Hads or ·Habs is the reactive species, we conducted
417
additional experiments of TCE hydrodechlorination with CMC-Pd nanoparticles at
418
varied H2 concentrations. We observed that TCE dechlorination only started to occur
419
after H/Pd molar ratio was over 1.4 (Figure 5B), at which the stoichiometric H/Pd
420
ratio is consistent with that of the palladium hydride (Pd38H55).89 It suggests that the
421
dechlorination process occurred only after the saturation of CMC-Pd by ·H, which
422
confirms that ·Hads on Me surface is the reactive species responsible for TCE
423
dechlorination by Fe-Me. This conclusion is consistent with previous understanding
424
of electrocatalytic dechlorination of 2,4-dichlorophenol on Pd nanoparticles
425
predominantly mediated by ·Hads.51 Since the amount of ·Hads on Fe-Me is controlled
426
by both the corrosion rate of Fe-Me and the binding strength of Me-H, TCE
427
dechlorination is also determined by both factors. Palladium with the optimal
428
properties of interacting with hydrogen possesses the highest reactivity for both HER
429
and TCE dechlorination. A mechanistic basis for the HER and TCE dechlorination on
430
Fe-Me is proposed in Figure 6A.
23 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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431 432 433 434 435 436
Figure 5. (A) The linear correlation of initial HER rates with initial kTCE of Fe-Me under excess iron conditions (S-nZVI not included; Iron: 1 g/L, TCE: 10 mg L-1; All experiments at pH 8 buffered by 25 mM HEPES and under anoxic conditions). (B) the 4h TCE removal by CMC-Pd at varied H2 concentrations represented by H/Pd atomic ratio (B); Lines are only interpolated.
437
For S-nZVI, sulfidation also enhanced electron transfer. However, this increase
438
of electron transfer resulted in reduced HER along with enhanced TCE dechlorination.
439
As expected, the point of S-nZVI in Figure 5A deviates significantly from the linear
440
line, which suggests that TCE dechlorination on S-nZVI may not be mediated by ·H
441
as the case for Fe-Me and a different mechanism was responsible for the enhanced
442
particle reactivity and selectivity. The non-atomic hydrogen mechanism is also
443
supported by the differed primary TCE dechlorination pathway on S-nZVI
444
(β-elimination) and Fe-Me (hydrogenolysis). We note that TCE dechlorination on
445
bare FeS was via β-elimination to form mainly acetylene and not mediated by atomic
446
hydrogen.68,
447
S-mZVI mainly occurred on FeS sites.53 It should be the similar case for S-nZVI, as
448
indicated by similar more accumulation of acetylene than nZVI during TCE
449
dechlorination. The observation that HER of S-nZVI ceased after 2 days while TCE
450
dechlorination continued and at an unchanged rate (Figure 3E and 4B) further
90
Our previous research has suggested that TCE dechlorination on
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451
indicates that the HER sits were mainly on iron oxides. This also suggests that the
452
atomic hydrogen on iron sulfides should be insignificant and not be responsible for
453
the TCE dechlorination on FeSx sites.
454
On the basis of the redox ladder constructed in our previous study,53 electron
455
flow is favorable through the Fe/FeS interface compared to Fe/Fe oxides. Therefore,
456
FeSx conducting major electrons (~72% based on electron utilization efficiency
457
calculation) mediated TCE dechlorination while Fe oxides conducting minor electrons
458
mediated HER, which explains the enhanced TCE reduction but reduced HER of
459
S-nZVI. Based on the discussion above, a mechanistic basis for the HER and TCE
460
dechlorination on S-nZVI was also proposed (Figure 6B).
461 462 463 464
Figure 6. Schematics of the proposed TCE dechlorination and HER on Fe-Me (A) and S-nZVI (B). The chemisorption of H2 on Me surface in (A) is only significant for Fe-Pd or Fe-Ni at high Ni loading. The portions of electron flow in (A) vary with Me.
465
We note that some researchers56 proposed a different explanation on the
466
enhanced TCE dechlorination but inhibited HER by S-nZVI that sulfur in S-nZVI
467
poisoned ·H recombination, which favored TCE reduction by ·H. Although the
468
underlying mechanism of this poisoning effect is not clear, it may be explained by the
469
strong binding of FeS-H that inhibited ·H recombination. However, the strong binding
470
of FeS-H should also inhibit the reaction of ·H with TCE to cause retarded 25 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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471
dechlorination. In addition, a pre-hypothesis of this explanation is that ·H mediates
472
TCE dechlorination on FeS surface. However, for bare FeS, dechlorination must be by
473
electron transfer.28, 67, 91 For S-nZVI, as TCE dechlorination was also mainly on FeS
474
surface, the process was more likely via electron transfer than via ·H. Further,
475
previous studies suggested that the pH dependence of TCE dechlorination was
476
opposite to HER or the availability of ·H on particle surface,28, 57, 58 which is also
477
inconsistent with this explanation.
478 479
Environmental Implications
480
Nanoscale ZVI with its flexibility in field injection, higher reactivity compared to
481
larger scale ZVI yet with high cost is likely to be used in source zone remediation.
482
Both bimetallic modification and sulfidation can enhance the reactivity of nZVI to
483
varying degrees. Sulfidation stands out as a promising nZVI modification approach as
484
it inhibits HER (i.e., longer lifetime), stays reactive for extended period of time, and
485
possesses the highest dechlorination capacity. The information of TCE dechlorination
486
rates, efficiencies, and capacities by modified nZVIs obtained from this study can
487
instruct practitioners to estimate the injection frequency and quantities of these
488
materials in field injection. The identification of electron transfer as the dominant
489
mechanism of TCE dechlorination on S-nZVI will further help predict the
490
dechlorination efficiency of other chlorinated contaminants in groundwater by
491
S-nZVI.
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Acknowledgements
493
The majority of this work was supported by the Natural Science Foundation of
494
Zhejiang Province (LR16E080003).
495
Supporting Information
496
Additional information on materials and methods, SEM and TEM images, Fe 2p XPS
497
spectra and fitting, reduction of additional compounds and electrochemical
498
characterization results.
499 500
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501
References
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