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Environmental Processes
Enhanced Photooxidation of Hydroquinone by Acetylacetone, a Novel Photosensitizer and Electron Shuttle Jiyuan Jin, Shujuan Zhang, Bingdang Wu, Zhihao Chen, Guoyang Zhang, and Paul G. Tratnyek Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.9b02751 • Publication Date (Web): 30 Aug 2019 Downloaded from pubs.acs.org on August 30, 2019
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Environmental Science & Technology
Enhanced Photooxidation of Hydroquinone by Acetylacetone, a Novel Photosensitizer and Electron Shuttle
Jiyuan Jin1, Shujuan Zhang1*, Bingdang Wu1, Zhihao Chen1, Guoyang Zhang1, and Paul G. Tratnyek2
1
State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, School of the Environment, Nanjing University, Nanjing, 210023, China
2 OHSU-PSU
School of Public Health, Oregon Health & Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR 97239, USA
*Correspondence author. Phone: +86 25 8968 0389, E-mail:
[email protected] Submitted to: Environmental Science & Technology
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Table of Contents
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ABSTRACT
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Quinones are important electron shuttles as well as micropollutants in the nature.
3
Acetylacetone (AA) is a newly recognized electron shuttle in aqueous media exposed to
4
UV irradiated. Herein, we studied the interactions between AA and hydroquinone (QH2)
5
under steady-state and transient photochemical conditions to clarify the possible reactions
6
and consequences if QH2 and AA co-exist in a solution. Steady-state experimental results
7
demonstrate that the interactions between AA and QH2 were strongly affected by dissolved
8
oxygen. In O2-rich solutions, the photo-transformation of QH2 was AA-independent. Both
9
QH2 and AA utilize O2 as the electron acceptor; but in O2-insufficient solutions, AA
10
became an important electron acceptor for the oxidation of QH2. In all cases, the co-
11
existence of AA increased the photo-transformation of QH2, whereas the decomposition of
12
AA in O2 saturated and over-saturated solutions was inhibited by the presence of QH2. The
13
underlying mechanisms were investigated by a combination of laser flash photolysis (LFP)
14
and reduction potential analysis. The LFP results show that the excited AA serves as a
15
better electron shuttle than QH2. As a consequence, AA might regulate the redox cycling
16
of quinones, leading to significant effects on many processes, ranging from photosynthesis
17
and respiration to photodegradation.
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INTRODUCTION
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Quinones are among the most characteristic reactive moieties in biological and
21
environmental
22
(dihydroxybenzene-containing) structures is an essential link in the electron transport chain
23
for both photosynthesis and cellular respiration.3,4 The interconversion between the
24
quinone and quinol structures is also the reaction mechanism responsible for the
25
anthraquinone autoxidation process that is used in industrial production of hydrogen
26
peroxide (H2O2).5 With their extensive use in a wide range of industries, quinones become
27
important micropollutants of the aquatic environment, including in effluents from textile
28
dying, photo-processing, coal-tar production, and paper manufacturing.6-9
chemistry.1,2
The
interconversion
of
quinone
and
quinol
29
The reactivity of quinones in aquatic media has been extensively studied from various
30
perspectives, including their photo-transformation10-14 and role as electron shuttles (redox
31
mediators) in natural and engineered systems.1,15-17 As electron shuttles, quinones can
32
produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) in photochemical redox cycling via either
33
oxidation of water or reduction of dissolved oxygen (DO).15-17 The ROS generated from
34
quinones mediates a wide range of environmental redox processes in the subsurface, soils,
35
sediments, surface and atmospheric waters.18-20
36
So far, more attention has been paid to the photo-transformation of quinones than
37
quinols.10-14 In a recent work,21 it was found that hydroquinone (QH2) is more
38
photochemically stable than 1,4-benzoquinone (BQ). Under identical conditions (0.5 mM
39
quinones, pH 6.8, air-saturated, 4.0-7.1 mW/cm2 at 365 nm, medium pressure mercury 2
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lamp), the pseudo-first-order rate constant (k1) of QH2 was in the range of 0.002-0.032 min-
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1, whereas the k of BQ was in the range of 0.39-1.01 min-1. In BQ-arsenite binary solutions, 1
42
BQ was rapidly reduced to QH2 under UV irradiation within a few minutes, while the
43
oxidation of arsenite occurred after the depletion of BQ,21 indicating that the ROS
44
generated from the photolysis of QH2 rather than BQ was responsible for the oxidation of
45
arsenite. Therefore, taking these secondary reactions into account, it appears that the
46
photochemistry of quinols is environmentally important and deserves further research.
47
The two carbonyl groups and the keto-enol tautomerization make acetylacetone (AA)
48
structurally similar to quinone/quinol. As the simplest β-diketone, AA is widely used as a
49
precursor in organic synthesis and as an additive in gasoline, lubricants, inks, and dyes.22-
50
24
51
UV irradiation, AA can rapidly decolorize several types of dyes, including quinone-based
52
dyes such as 1-aminoanthraquinone-2-sulfonic acid, 1-amino-2-hydroxyl anthraquinone-
53
2-sulfonic acid, 4,4’-diamino-1,1’-dianthraquinone-3,3’-disulfonate and alizarin red.26,27
54
Based on this observation, we proposed that AA might be an environmentally significant
55
photoactivator.28 In follow-up work, we found that the UV-excited AA reacted similarly to
56
semiquinone radicals (QH•−) in redox reactions involving arsenite and nitrate.21,29 In the
57
photo-oxidation of arsenite, the k1 of arsenite oxidation in the UV/AA process was 10 and
58
60 times to those in the UV/QH2 and UV/BQ processes, whereas the consumption of AA
59
was less than 1/25 and 1/1000 of those of QH2 and BQ, respectively.29 The efficient
60
electron shuttling between arsenite and DO via AA and excited AA was attributed to the
AA is also reported as an oxidation product in the treatment of sludge liquors.25 Under
3
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higher efficiency but lower consumption of AA as compared with quinones.29 Since then,
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we have further shown that AA under dark conditions can serve as an electron donor for
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BQ, resulting in the formation of QH· and the subsequent reduction to QH2.30
64
QH2 with a standard reduction potential (E0QH·/QH2) of 1.04 V vs SHE is a mild
65
reductant relative to many environmental species.17 The reduction potential (E(AA+H)·/AA)
66
and oxidation potential (EAA/(AA-H)·) of AA have been determined to be -1.172 V vs SHE at
67
pH 2.0 and 0.969 V vs SHE at pH 7.0, respectively.29 These E values suggest that electron
68
transfer between QH2 and AA may be thermodynamically favorable under environmental
69
conditions, but there appears to be no prior work documenting direct reaction between QH2
70
and AA.
71
Although the photochemistry of QH2 and AA have been investigated
72
individually,12,21,26-29 it is still unclear what will happen if QH2 and AA co-exist in a
73
solution. Specifically, both QH2 and AA are known as electron shuttles, but it is not clear
74
which will act as the electron donor and which will act as the acceptor under UV irradiation.
75
The interactions between QH2 and AA are expected to affect not only the formation of
76
ROS, with or without photoactivation, but also many biological and environmental redox
77
processes. Therefore, in the present work, we studied the interactions of QH2 and AA in
78
both steady-state and transient photochemical systems. The objectives were: (1) to clarify
79
the electron shuttling performances of QH2 and AA in the absence and presence of O2, and
80
(2) to elucidate the mechanisms of the interactions between QH2 and AA. To the best of
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our knowledge, this is the first work on the interactions between QH2 and diketones in
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aquatic photochemical systems.
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EXPERIMENTAL
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Materials. All materials were used as received without any purification. QH2 and AA
86
of analytical grade were purchased from Nanjing Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd., China. H2O2
87
(30 wt%) was purchased from Shanghai Lingfeng Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd., China.
88
Phosphoric acid and 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (2,4-DNPH) of analytical grade were
89
obtained from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd., China. N,N-diethyl-p-
90
phenylenediamine (DPD) and peroxidase (POD) from horseradish (150 U/mg) were
91
bought from Sigma-Aldrich, Germany and Sigma, Switzerland, respectively. 5,5-dimethyl-
92
1-pyrroline-1-oxide (DMPO) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich Co. Ltd., USA. KH2PO4
93
(≥ 99.5%, HPLC grade) was purchased from Aladdin Industrial Corporation (Shanghai,
94
China). Formic acid (HPLC grade) was purchased from Roe Scientific Inc., USA.
95
Methanol and acetonitrile of chromatography grade were purchased from Merck Co. Ltd.,
96
Germany. Ultrapure water (18.25 MΩ·cm) made from a water purification system
97
(Shanghai Ulupure Industrial Co. Ltd., China) was used throughout the experiments.
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The pH of all solutions was about 6.0, without any adjustment. High purity N2, O2 and
99
N2O (99.99%) were used to purge the solutions whenever needed. Solutions were bubbled
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for at least 20 min prior to UV irradiation and was continuingly bubbled throughout the
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whole irradiation process. 5
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Steady-state Irradiation Experiments. The irradiation experiments were conducted
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with a rotating disk photoreactor (Nanjing Stone Tech Electric Equipment, China). A
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medium-pressure mercury lamp was used as the light source. The emission spectrum was
105
detected with a miniature fiber optic spectrometer (USB2000+, Ocean Optics Inc., Largo,
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USA). More details about the reactor were available in a previous report.31
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Laser Flash Photolysis Experiments. Transient absorption experiments were
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conducted with an LP980 Edinburgh instrument (UK) with laser excitation at 266 nm from
109
a Surelite I-10 Q-Switched Nd: YAG laser (35 mJ). A xenon lamp was used as detecting
110
light source, and a 100 MHz Tektronix TDS3012C digital oscilloscope was employed to
111
record the transient signals of aqueous solutions in a 1 cm path length quartz cell. The
112
software L900 provided by Edinburgh was used to analyze the digitized signal.
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Prior to laser flash photolysis experiments, the N2-purged solutions were added to fill
114
quartz cells (1 cm in diameter) and were further deoxygenated in a glovebox (Super
115
(1220/750/900), Mikrouna Co. Ltd., Shanghai, China). O2-saturated solutions were
116
transferred to quartz cells immediately after purging with high purity oxygen and were
117
sealed with screw caps to conduct the photolysis experiments. The reaction progress was
118
characterized by subtracting the absorbance of the raw solution from the absorbance of the
119
laser pulsed solution. The absorbance difference is denoted as △OD, which is indicative of
120
the intensities of generated species from laser pulse. The △OD reaches the highest point
121
within a short time after laser pulse and then decays exponentially with time.
122
Analytical Approach. Absorption spectra of the solutions were recorded with a 6
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double beam spectrophotometer (UV-2700, Shimadzu Co., Japan). The DO content was
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determined with a dissolved oxygen meter (SG9-ELK, Mettler Toledo). Solution pH was
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measured with a pH meter (intelliCALTM MTC101, HACH). The concentration of H2O2
126
was determined with the DPD-POD method.32
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The concentration of AA was analyzed with a high-performance liquid
128
chromatography (HPLC, Ultimate 3000, Dionex Co. Ltd., USA) system. Prior to analysis,
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AA-containing solutions were mixed with 2,4-DNPH (0.6 g/L in a 0.2% phosphoric acid-
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methanol solution) for at least 3 h for the derivatization of AA.33 The derivation products
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were recorded with a UV detector at 254 nm. A C18 column (SunFire, 5 μm, 4.6 × 150
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mm, Waters, Ireland) was equipped to separate AA derivatives from QH2 at 25 oC. The
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mobile phase was composed of methanol and water at a ratio of 6:4 and was pumped at a
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flow rate of 0.8 mL·min-1. The concentration of QH2 was determined with the HPLC at
135
225 nm with an Eclipse Plus C8 column at 25 oC (5 μm, 4.6 × 150 mm, Agilent, USA).
136
The mobile phase was composed of methanol and 5 mM KH2PO4 at a ratio of 3:7 and was
137
pumped at a flow rate of 0.6 mL·min-1.
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The reaction products were identified with a Thermo Fisher Scientific Q ExactiveTM
139
Focus Orbitrap LC-MS/MS system. A ZORBAX Eclipse Plus column C18 (4.6×150 mm,
140
3.5 μm, Aglient, USA) was used for separation. Acetonitrile and 0.1% phosphoric acid
141
(30%/70%, V/V) at a flow rate of 0.2 mL·min-1 were used as the mobile phase.
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Electron spin resonance (ESR) experiments were conducted with a DRX500
143
spectrometer (Bruker Co. Ltd., Germany) and a 180 W MP-Hg lamp as the light source. 7
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The running parameters were as follows: center field of 3480.0 G, sweep width of 200 G,
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microwave frequency of 9.773 GHz and power of 19.922 mW.
146
Calculation of Inner Filter Effect. The inner filter effect was quantified with the
147
fraction of available photons to the tested chemicals by the presence of other light-
148
absorbing substances. Basically, the absorption spectra of the chemicals and the emission
149
spectrum of the light source was used for the calculation of the inner filter effect. The inner
150
filter effect (ICF) was calculated with the following equation:
Q Q
,w/
I CF 151
(1)
152
where is the photonic efficiency, i.e., the ratio of the number of converted molecules to
153
the total number of photons absorbed by the system; λ (nm) is the wavelength; Q is the
154
absorbed number of photons of a given λ per unit time; “w/” indicates the coexistence of
155
light-absorbing substances. More details for the calculation are available in previous
156
work.31
157 158
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
159
Photo-transformation of QH2 and AA. Quinones generally are stable in acidic to
160
neutral solutions, but are much more labile to reduction under alkaline conditions.34 In the
161
absence of UV irradiation, the solutions of AA and QH2 under ambient conditions were
162
stable over 6 hr (Figure S1). However, as illustrated in Figure 1a-c, even in acidic to neutral
163
solutions, reaction between QH2 and AA is rapid under UV irradiation. The photo8
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transformation of QH2 was dependent on AA concentration, but also the concentration of
165
DO (Figure 1a-c and Table 1). In N2-purged solutions ([O2] < 0.01 mM), the photo-
166
transformation of QH2 was negligible in the absence of AA, but was significantly enhanced
167
by the addition of AA (Figure 1a). There was a positive correlation between the k1,QH2 and
168
the concentration of AA (inset of Figure 1a). In O2-saturated solutions ([O2] ≈ 1.4 mM),
169
QH2 underwent a rapid photo-transformation and the enhancement effect of AA on the
170
photo-transformation of QH2 became less significant (Figure 1b).
171
Interestingly, a two-stage photo-transformation process was observed in the air-
172
saturated solutions ([O2] = 0.28 mM) when the concentrations of AA and QH2 were in the
173
range of 0.1-0.2 mM (Figure 1c). The thermal reaction of QH2 is sensitive to solution pH,
174
with the deprotonated form of QH2 usually being more reactive than the protonated
175
species.12 After irradiation, the solution pH had decreased from 5.8 to around 4.0
176
(depending on the concentration of AA) (Figure 1d). In this pH range, the speciation of
177
QH2 (pKa = 9.85) was unaltered. Consequently, the reaction was not affected by such a pH
178
change. This is further confirmed by the experiment run in buffered solutions. As shown
179
in Figure S2, the two-stage kinetics exist in both buffered and unbuffered solutions.
180
Therefore, it is reasonable to infer that the two-stage kinetics was not caused by the change
181
in solution pH. Instead, the depletion of DO was attributed to the decreased rate of photo-
182
transformation of QH2 in the later stage (Figure 1e). This conclusion is supported by the
183
positive correlation between the photo-transformation of QH2 and the concentration level
184
of O2 (Table 1). This conclusion was also supported by the segmentation of the k1, DO vs 9
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[AA]/[QH2] profile, with a break point at the AA/QH2 molar ratio of 1 (Figure 1f). The
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absence of segmentation in the kinetic curve of the 0.5 mM AA-0.2 mM QH2 solution
187
could be explained by the combined roles of DO and AA: the inhibition caused by the
188
depletion of DO was compensated by enhancement from the residual AA. In short, the
189
photo-transformation of QH2 in the presence of AA is a two-step process: the first step is
190
the AA-independent conversion of QH2 under conditions of sufficient O2; the second step
191
is the AA-dependent transformation of QH2 under O2-deficiency conditions.
192
Accompanying with the photo-transformation of QH2, AA was simultaneously
193
decomposed (Table 1). AA decomposition was fastest in air-saturated solutions. Both
194
deoxygenation (N2-purging) and oxygenation (O2-purging) resulted in slower
195
decomposition of AA. In all cases, the co-existence of AA was favorable for the photo-
196
transformation of QH2, whereas the presence of QH2 inhibited the decomposition of AA in
197
aerated and oxygenated solutions (Table 1). The ratio of k1 values for the disappearance of
198
QH2 and DO was close to 1 (0.095 min-1 vs 0.081 min-1), as was the ratio of k1 values for
199
the disappearance of AA and DO (0.137 min-1 vs 0.126 min-1) (Table S1). Therefore, it is
200
reasonable to infer that the inhibition that occurred in the aerated solutions arose from the
201
competition between QH2 and AA for O2. However, this competition should be
202
insignificant in the oxygenated solution, because the concentration of DO was far larger
203
than that of QH2 and AA.
204
Besides the competition for O2, QH2 and AA also competed for photons (Figure S3). In
205
the mixture, the number of photons available to AA was reduced by QH2 and the photolysis 10
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products (Figure S3). The fraction of available photons to AA was in the range of 0.68-
207
0.36 (Figure S3), which is consistent with the k1,AA(w/ QH2)/k1,AA(w/o QH2) ratios (0.59-0.31)
208
(Table 1). Therefore, the observed inhibitory effect of QH2 on the photo-transformation of
209
AA derived from the inner filter effect. This inner filter effect was mutual because AA, in
210
turn, exerted an inner filter effect on the photo-transformation of QH2. Comparatively, the
211
inner filter effect for QH2 was weaker than that for AA, because the products of QH2 had
212
much stronger absorption than those of AA. The enhancement effect of AA on the photo-
213
transformation of QH2 compensates for the inner filter effect caused by AA. As a result,
214
faster rates of photo-transformation of QH2 were caused by the co-existence of AA.
215
As noted above, H2O2 could be generated by the reaction of QH2 with O2. The complex
216
effect of DO on the photo-transformation was reflected in the formation rate of H2O2 (Table
217
S1). More H2O2 was generated in the oxygenated QH2-containing solutions (from 1.542 to
218
3.601 M/min in QH2 solution and from 1.288 to 1.810 M/min in QH2-AA solution),
219
whereas oxygenation decreased the formation of H2O2 in the AA solution (from 1.256 to
220
0.642 M/min). With the addition of AA, the yields of H2O2 in both air-saturated and O2-
221
saturated solutions were decreased about 16.5% (from 1.542 to 1.288 M/min) and 49.7%
222
(from 3.601 to 1.810 M/min), respectively, although AA could also produce H2O2 (Table
223
S1).
224
Other than H2O2, other products were detected in the solutions using LC-MS/MS
225
(Figure S4). In O2-saturated solutions, the species generated in the irradiated QH2-AA
226
solution were the same as those in the irradiated QH2 solution, and included hydroxyl11
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benzoquinone (QOH), 2,5,2’,5’-tetrahydroxybiphenyl (THBP), and hydroxylated THBP
228
derivatives (M1-M4) (Table S2 and S3). In N2-purged or air-saturated solutions, the
229
addition of AA led to the formation of additional products from the adducts of AA-derived
230
radicals with the above mentioned quinoid molecules (Table S2 and S3). The above results
231
demonstrate that in the presence of sufficient O2, the photo-transformation of QH2 and AA
232
proceeded independently. In low O2 or anoxic systems, the interaction between QH2 and
233
AA became predominant.
234
Primary Photochemical and Photophysical Processes in QH2 Solution. To better
235
understand the interactions between QH2 and AA, time-resolved transient absorption
236
spectra and kinetic traces under various conditions were obtained. The primary
237
photochemistry and photophysics of QH2 and AA individually have been reported in the
238
literature.12,23,28 After a photon is absorbed, QH2 is activated to the first excited state
239
1(QH
240
photoionization, and intersystem crossing (ISC) to 3(QH2)* with a quantum yield (ΦISC) of
241
0.39.12 The generated 3(QH2)* is a strong reductant (Eh7(QH·/3(QH2)*) = -2.84 V vs SHE)
242
and could react with O2 and other applicable chemicals through direct electron transfer.12,21
243
AA is non-fluorescent with a ΦISC of 1.0.23 Upon photoexcitation, the triplet excited state
244
of AA, i.e., 3(AA)*, was the main transient species, which could be quenched by O2 or
245
heterolytically degraded into carbon-centered or oxygen-centered radicals.28
*,
2)
which decays by three possible pathways: fluorescence quenching, direct
246
After the laser pulse, three absorption bands were observed at 312, 410 and 650 nm
247
(Figure 2a). A shoulder peak at 428 nm appeared at pH 4.0 or above and was absent at pH 12
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3.0 (Figure 2a). The band at 650 nm was enhanced by deoxygenation and was a
249
characteristic absorption of eaq–. The species at 312, 410, and 428 nm have been assigned
250
to QH•/Q•−.11,12 As illustrated in the kinetic traces (Figure 2b), the 410 nm and 650 nm
251
species appeared first, followed by the formation of the 312 nm and 428 nm species. In
252
contrast to the 312 nm and 428 nm traces, the 410 nm trace showed a sharp decline at the
253
very beginning (< 200 ns). The maximum △OD of the 312 nm and 428 nm species were
254
insensitive to DO, whereas the maximum △OD of the 410 nm species was reduced by DO
255
(Table 2). After the rapid decline, the secondary maximum △OD of the 410 nm species
256
was also DO-independent.
257
On the basis of the above observation, we propose that the 410 nm species was the
258
cation radical of QH2 (QH2•+), coming from the photoionization of 1(QH2)*. QH2•+ should
259
deprotonate relatively rapidly in neutral solutions (pKa = -0.8) and the generated QH· will
260
deprotonate further to Q•− (pKa = 4.0).12 Both QH2•+ and QH· had a peak absorption at 410
261
nm, whereas the maximum absorption of Q•− was at 428 nm. There are three possible
262
reaction pathways between 3(QH2)* and O2: thermal quenching, energy transfer, and
263
electron transfer. Energy transfer leads to the formation of singlet oxygen (1O2), whereas
264
direct electron transfer results in the formation of QH2•+. Compared with the N2-purged
265
counterpart, less QH2•+ radical was generated in the aerated and oxygenated solution,
266
excluding the direct electron transfer between 3(QH2)* and O2. The higher maximum △OD
267
values at 410 nm and 428 nm in the oxygenated solution compared with the aerated results
268
suggest that electron transfer between 3(QH2)* and O2 did occur, but in a proton coupled 13
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pathway. As a result, the product was QH·, rather than QH2•+. It should be noted that all of
270
the quinone radicals could react with O2. Therefore, the lifetimes of these species were DO-
271
dependent because a higher DO concentration led to a short lifetime (Table 2). In aerated
272
and oxygenated solutions, the addition of AA had a negligible effect on the lifetimes of the
273
quinone radicals. However, the lifetimes of the quinone radicals in the N2-purged solution
274
was significantly reduced by the addition of AA, providing a direct evidence for the
275
interaction between quinone radicals and AA.
276
The effect of AA was also observed in the decay of eaq– (Figure 3). The addition of
277
AA reduced both the maximum △OD at 650 nm and the lifetime of the eaq– (Table 2). The
278
reduced △OD at 650 nm was due to the inhibited photoionization of QH2 caused by the
279
inner filter effect from AA. The shortened lifetime was a result of the reaction between eaq–
280
and AA, whose contribution was more significant in N2-purged solution than those in O2-
281
containing solutions, because O2 is a powerful scavenger of eaq–.35
282
Difference in reduction potential is the main driving force for the electron transfer
283
between a reductant-oxidant pair. The reduction potentials of O2, AA, and QH2 related
284
species are illustrated in Figure 4. On the basis of the E values, there were six main possible
285
electron transfer pathways for the decomposition of QH2: from 3(QH2)* to O2 (Path a), from
286
3(QH
287
d), from QH2 to 3(AA)* (Path e), and from QH2 to (AA-H)· (Path f). As for the
288
decomposition of AA, there were only two main possible electron transfer pathways: from
*
2)
to AA (Path b), from 3(QH2)* to 3(AA)* (Path c), from 3(QH2)* to (AA-H)· (Path
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to O2 (Path g) and from 3(AA)* to Q•− (Path h). The contributions of these pathways
289
3(AA)*
290
were dependent on the relative abundance of the reactants and the △E. Both the abundance
291
of the reactants and the △E were much more favorable for QH2 than for AA. This also
292
explains why in all cases, the co-existence of AA was favorable for the photo-
293
transformation of QH2, whereas inhibition effect was observed in the decomposition of AA.
294
The above mechanisms are summarized in Scheme 1. In short, the photoexcitation of
295
QH2 leads to the formation of 1(QH2)* and 3(QH2)*, which undergoes a series of further
296
reactions: physical quenching (collisional deactivation), energy transfer to generate 1O2,
297
and electron transfer to generate O2•− and H2O2. The reactive species in Scheme 1,
298
including eaq−, ·OH and Q • −, were confirmed with ESR determination (Figure S5).
299
Although no direct detection of O2•− was conducted, there was a solid evidence for the
300
formation of O2•−: The kinetic traces for eaq− varied with the change of DO (Figures 2 and
301
3), indicating the reaction between eaq− and O2, with O2•− as the product. O2•− will then
302
disproportionate to H2O2 and O2. Similar to O2, AA serves as an electron acceptor for QH2.
303
Therefore, in O2-deficient solutions, AA plays a significant role in the decomposition of
304
QH2 as an alternative of O2.
305
Environmental Implications. In the present work, we verified that AA can serve as
306
an electron acceptor for QH2 in UV irradiated systems. The role of AA in the photo-
307
transformation of QH2 was much more significant in anoxic solutions than in aerated
308
solution, indicating that the electron accepting ability of AA was weaker than that of O2.
309
However, because excited AA serves as both an electron donor and acceptor (O2 can serve 15
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310
only as an electron acceptor), it plays an important role in the interconversion between BQ
311
(AA acted as an electron donor in the reduction of BQ30) and QH2. Since AA was much
312
more stable and abundant than semiquinone radicals, AA may play a more important role
313
in photochemical systems. For example, intracellular AA might participate in the cycling
314
of quinones and consequently influence oxidative stress in living organisms. For
315
environmental engineering applications, QH2 has been found to greatly increase the
316
degradation rate of substituted benzenes in Fenton-like reactions (through enhanced
317
formation of ROS),15 AA might also be able to affect the Fenton and Fenton-like reactions.
318
The possibility for AA to be used in regulation of artificial photosynthesis and
319
photodynamic action are also topics deserving of attention.
320 321
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
322
Supporting Information
323
Further details of the experimental data are presented free of charge on the internet at
324
http://pubs.acs.org. These materials include: UV spectra (Figure S1), QH2 degradation in
325
buffered solutions (Figure S2), UV spectra and correction factor of inner filter effect
326
(Figure S3), total ion current spectra (Figure S4), ESR spectra (Figure S5), rate constants
327
of O2 and H2O2 (Table S1), products in the UV irradiated solutions (Table S2) and ion
328
current intensity of products (Table S2).
329 330
AUTHOR INFORMATION 16
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331
Corresponding Author
332
*Phone: +86 25 8968 0389; E-mail:
[email protected] 333
Notes
334
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
335 336
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
337
This work was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
338
China (No. 21677070) and the National Key Research and Development Program of
339
China (No. 2018YFC1802003).
340 341
Reference
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Role of proton-coupled electron transfer in the redox interconversion between
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quinone redox chemistry mediating daytime and nighttime NO2-to-HONO
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conversion on soil surfaces. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2017, 51 (17), 9633-9643.
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arsenite and nitrate in the UV/quinone systems. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2018, 52 (17),
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induced photoisomerization of intramolecularly H-bonded symmetric beta-diketones.
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J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2014, 136 (42), 14981-14989.
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of carbonyl compounds by the PFBOA method and the effect on the chemical oxygen
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demand. Natl. Meet. Am. Chem. Soc. Div. Environ. Chem. 1996, 36 (2), 70-74.
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(26) Zhang, S. J.; Liu, X. T.; Wang, M. S.; Wu, B. D.; Pan, B. C.; Yang, H; Yu, H. Q.
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Diketone-mediated photochemical processes for target-selective degradation of dye
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pollutants. Environ. Sci. Technol. Lett. 2014, 1, 167-171.
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(27) Liu, X. T.; Song, X. J.; Zhang, S. J.; Wang, M. S.; Pan, B. C. Non-hydroxyl radical
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mediated photochemical processes for dye degradation. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys.
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photochemical processes for water treatment. Water Res. 2016, 101, 233-240.
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Acetylacetone as an efficient electron shuttle for concerted redox conversion of
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arsenite and nitrate in the opposite direction. Water Res. 2017, 124, 331-340.
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(30) Jin, J. Y.; Chen, Z. H.; Song, X. J.; Wu, B. D.; Zhang, G. Y.; Zhang, S. J. Effects of
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acetylacetone on the thermal and photochemical conversion of benzoquinone in
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aqueous solution. Chemosphere 2019, 223, 628-635.
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(31) Wu, B. D.; Yin, M. H.; Yin, R.; Zhang, S. J. Applicability of light sources and the
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inner filter effect in UV/acetylacetone and UV/H2O2. J. Hazard. Mater. 2017, 335,
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100-107.
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(32) Bader, H.; Sturzenegger, V.; Hoigne, J. Photometric method for the determination of
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low concentrations of hydrogen peroxide by the peroxidase catalyzed oxidation of
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N, N-diethyl-p-phenylenediamine (DPD). Water Res. 1988, 22 (9), 1109-1115.
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(33) Cardoso, D. R.; Bettin, S. M.; Reche, R. V.; Lima-Neto, B. S.; Franco, D. HPLC-
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DAD analysis of ketones as their 2, 4-dinitrophenylhydrazones in Brazilian sugar-
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cane spirits and rum. J. Food Compos. Anal. 2003, 16 (5), 563-573.
431
(34) Sadykh-Zade, S. I.; Ragimov, A. V.; Suleimanova, S. S.; Liogon'kii, V. I. The
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polymerization of quinones in an alkaline medium and the structure of the resulting
433
polymers. Polym. Sci. U.S.S.R. 1972, 14 (6), 1395-1403.
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(35) Buxton, G. V.; Greenstock, C. L.; Helman, W. P.; Ross, A. B.; Tsang, W. Review of 21
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rate constants for reactions of hydrated electrons chemical kinetic data base for
436
combustion chemistry, part 3: propane. J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data 1988, 17, 513-886.
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438
Figure, Scheme and Table Captions
439
Figure 1. The evolution of QH2 (a-c), pH (d), and DO (e) in UV irradiated QH2 and QH2-
440
AA solutions. (f) The k1 of DO consumption vs the concentration ratio of AA
441
to QH2 in air-saturated solutions. [QH2]0: 0.2 mM, UV: 6.0 mW·cm-2 at 365
442
nm.
443
Figure 2. (a) The transient absorption spectra of QH2 (0.2 mM) in N2-purged and air-
444
saturated solutions of different pH. (b) The kinetic traces of the species at 312
445
nm, 410 nm, 428 nm, and 650 nm in a N2-purged QH2 solution (0.2 mM). Laser
446
(266 nm): 71.2 mJ/pulse.
447
Figure 3. (a) The kinetic traces of the species at 650 nm in (a) a long time interval and (b)
448
a short time interval after the laser pulse. [QH2]0 = [AA]0 = 0.2 mM, Laser (266
449
nm): 71.2 mJ/pulse.
450
Figure 4. The redox potential ladder and the possible electron transfer pathways of
451
quinones, O2, and AA related species at pH 6.0. The gray shadow represents
452
the stability area of H2O. Solid arrows: main pathways, dashed arrows: minor
453
pathways. The Eh6 values were calculated from the reported E0 values.17,21,29
454
Scheme 1. The photochemistry and photophysics of QH2 and AA in UV irradiated
455 456
solutions. Table 1.
457 458
The k1 values of the photo-transformation of QH2 (0.2 mM) and AA (0.2 mM) in mono- (w/o) and binary (w/) solutions. UV: 6.0 mW·cm-2 at 365 nm.
Table 2.
The maximum △OD and lifetime () of laser pulse generated species in QH2 23
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459
(0.2 mM) and QH2-AA (0.2 mM) solutions. Laser (266 nm): 71.2 mJ/pulse.
24
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461 462
Figure 1. The evolution of QH2 (a-c), pH (d), and DO (e) in UV irradiated QH2 and QH2-
463
AA solutions. (f) The k1 of DO consumption vs the concentration ratio of AA to QH2 in
464
air-saturated solutions. [QH2]0: 0.2 mM, UV: 6.0 mW·cm-2 at 365 nm.
25
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466 467
Figure 2. (a) The transient absorption spectra of 0.2 mM QH2 in N2-purged and air-
468
saturated solutions of different pH. (b) The kinetic traces of the species at 312 nm, 410 nm,
469
428 nm, and 650 nm in a N2-purged QH2 solution (0.2 mM). Laser (266 nm): 71.2 mJ/pulse.
26
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471 472
Figure 3. (a) The kinetic traces of the species at 650 nm in (a) a long time interval and (b)
473
a short time interval after the laser pulse. [QH2]0 = [AA]0 = 0.2 mM, Laser (266 nm): 71.2
474
mJ/pulse.
475
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476 477
Figure 4. The redox potential ladder and the possible electron transfer pathways of
478
quinones, O2, and AA related species at pH 6.0. The gray shadow represents the stability
479
area of H2O. Solid arrows: main pathways, dashed arrows: minor pathways. The Eh6 values
480
were calculated from the reported E0 values.17,21,29
28
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482
Scheme 1. The photochemistry and photophysics of QH2 and AA in UV irradiated
483
solutions.
484
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486
Table 1. The k1 values of the photo-transformation of QH2 (0.2 mM) and AA (0.2 mM) in
487
mono- (w/o) and binary (w/) solutions. UV: 6.0 mW·cm-2 at 365 nm. [AA]0
N2
Air
O2
0
0.1 mM
0.2 mM
0.3 mM
0.003
0.022
0.048
0.186
k1,AA (w/ QH2)
0.083
0.073
0.050
k1,AA (w/o QH2)
0.023
0.020
0.018
k1,AA(w/)/k1,AA(w/o)
3.55
3.74
2.83
0.107
0.109
0.111
k1,AA (w/ QH2)
0.054
0.056
0.046
k1,AA (w/o QH2)
0.177
0.137
0.078
k1,AA(w/)/k1,AA(w/o)
0.31
0.41
0.59
0.138
0.150
0.151
k1,AA (w/ QH2)
0.038
0.041
0.038
k1,AA (w/o QH2)
0.107
0.099
0.084
k1,AA(w/)/k1,AA(w/o)
0.36
0.41
0.45
k1,QH2
k1,QH2
k1,QH2
0.095
0.126
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489
Table 2. The maximum △OD and lifetime () of laser pulse generated species in QH2 (0.2
490
mM) and QH2-AA (0.2 mM) solutions. Laser (266 nm): 71.2 mJ/pulse. QH2
QH2+AA
Species
△OD
(s)
N2
Air
O2
N2
Air
O2
312 nm
0.161
0.168
0.162
0.161
0.149
0.156
410 nm (p)a
0.111
0.082
0.098
0.088
0.086
0.093
410 nm (s)b
0.065
0.061
0.064
0.060
0.058
0.065
428 nm
0.066
0.067
0.072
0.059
0.068
0.074
650 nm
0.145
0.128
0.116
0.105
0.066
0.068
312 nm
69.1
22.5
19.9
48.9
21.9
20.9
410 nm (p)
0.56
0.21
0.10
0.45
0.22
0.11
410 nm (s)
47.4
22.8
19.6
40.5
22.4
19.5
428 nm
60.4
22.6
20.1
37.2
22.8
15.8
650 nm
606
134
43
246
101
44
491
a The
primary maximum △OD immediately after the laser pulse.
492
b The
secondary maximum △OD after the rapid decline at the very beginning.
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