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Kinetics and Mechanism of Ultrasonic Activation of Persulfate: An In-Situ EPR Spin Trapping Study Zongsu Wei, Frederick A. Villamena, and Linda K. Weavers Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b05392 • Publication Date (Web): 22 Feb 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 24, 2017
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Kinetics and Mechanism of Ultrasonic
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Activation of Persulfate: An In-Situ EPR Spin
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Trapping Study
5 6 Zongsu Wei†, Frederick A. Villamena‡, and Linda K. Weavers†*
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†Department of Civil, Environmental and Geodetic Engineering, The Ohio State
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University, Columbus, Ohio, U.S.A 43210
12 13
‡
Department of Biological Chemistry and Pharmacology and The Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, U.S.A 43210
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*To whom correspondence should be addressed. Phone: (614) 292-4061; fax: (614) 292-
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3780; e-mail address:
[email protected]. 1
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ABSTRACT
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Ultrasound (US) was shown to activate persulfate (PS) providing an alternative
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activation method to base or heat as an in-situ chemical oxidation (ISCO) method. The
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kinetics and mechanism of ultrasonic activation of PS were examined in aqueous solution
22
using an in-situ electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin trapping technique and
23
radical trapping with probe compounds. Using the spin trap, 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-
24
oxide (DMPO), hydroxyl radical (•OH) and sulfate radical anion (SO4•‒) were measured
25
from ultrasonic activation of persulfate (US-PS). The yield of •OH was up to one order of
26
magnitude greater than that of SO4•‒. The comparatively high •OH yield was attributed to
27
the hydrolysis of SO4•‒ in the warm interfacial region of cavitation bubbles formed from
28
US. Using steady-state approximations, the dissociation rate of PS in cavitating bubble
29
systems was determined to be three orders of magnitude greater than control experiments
30
without sonication at ambient temperature. From calculations of the interfacial volume
31
surrounding cavitation bubbles and using the Arrhenius equation, an effective mean
32
temperature of 340 K at the bubble-water interface was estimated. Comparative studies
33
using the probe compounds tert-Butyl alcohol and nitrobenzene verified the bubble-water
34
interface as the location for PS activation by high temperature with •OH contributing a
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minor role in activating PS to SO4•‒. The mechanisms unveiled in this study provide a
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basis for optimizing US-PS as an ISCO technology.
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Keywords: ultrasound, persulfate, EPR, DMPO, bubble-water interface
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INTRODUCTION
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Activated persulfate (PS) has recently gained use as an in-situ chemical oxidation
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(ISCO) technology.1 PS has a long half-life (600 days at 25 °C) allowing for transport of
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the reactant from an injection point to locations of contamination.2 Within the
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remediation region, the activation of PS to sulfate radical anion (SO4•‒), a strong oxidant,
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is achieved through thermal treatment,3, 4 base injection,5, 6 or catalyst addition (e.g., Fe2+,
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Fe2+-EDTA, and Co2+).7, 8 PS activation has also been achieved by reaction with natural
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organic matter (NOM)9, 10 and naturally occurring minerals,2 as well as by electrokinetic
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reaction11 and UV irradiation.12, 13 In limited studies, ultrasound (US) has been shown to
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activate PS.14-20 Ultrasound has the potential for use in ISCO settings by flooding a
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contaminated region with PS and driving ultrasonic units into the subsurface using direct
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push technology.21, 22
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Activation by US is thought to occur in two possible ways. In both mechanisms,
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the activation begins by the sonication of aqueous solution inducing cavitation bubbles.
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Collapse of those bubbles generates localized “hot spots” where temperature and pressure
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are as high as 5000 K and 1000 atm, respectively.23 This high localized temperature has
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been reported as one mechanism for PS dissociation in US systems. In the second
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mechanism, hydroxyl radical (•OH) generated from dissociation of water molecules in
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cavitation bubbles attacks PS ions forming SO4•‒, bisulfate ion, and oxygen.17 However,
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these proposed mechanisms of ultrasonic activation of PS have not been confirmed
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experimentally.
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To characterize radical formation from PS dissociation, SO4•‒ is usually estimated
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through an indirect measurement of a decrease in PS concentration.2, 4, 24 This indirect
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measurement may over-estimate the activation process because PS may undergo
77
reactions other than the assumed cleavage of the peroxide bond to form SO4•‒. Electron
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paramagnetic resonance (EPR) has been widely used as a method to directly detect free
79
radicals through use of a spin trap such as 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO).10,
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25
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compared to radical production in the ultrasound-persulfate (US-PS) system. Thus, the
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detection of DMPO adducts in EPR is an almost simultaneous reflection of radical
83
formation.
The addition of •OH (2.8 × 109 M-1 s-1)26 or SO4•‒ (this study) to the spin trap is rapid as
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The objective of the current study was to investigate the activation mechanisms of
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PS in a cavitating bubble system. In order to elucidate reaction pathways in the US-PS
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system, an ultrasonic reactor coupled to an EPR spectrometer through a flow cell was
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designed to detect and quantify radical formation. We hypothesized that PS ions undergo
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thermal dissociation and •OH activation into SO4•‒ at the high temperature (~1900 K)27, 28
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of the bubble-water interface. To test this hypothesis, batch sequential experiments and
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kinetic modeling were conducted. Using the spin trap DMPO, •OH and SO4•‒ production
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were first determined in the US and US-PS systems, respectively. Next, since it was
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challenging to directly probe PS activation in the interfacial region, a kinetic model was
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developed to fit the PS dissociation rate at the interface. Finally, to gain insight into the
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role of •OH in PS activation, two probe compounds, tert-Butyl alcohol (TBA) and
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nitrobenzene (NB), were employed to manipulate and verify the reaction pathway 5
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involved in PS activation. The experimental and modeling results provide a more
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transparent picture of the kinetics, reactivity, and distribution of PS activation at the
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bubble-water interface in the US system.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Materials
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The spin trap reagent, 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO; > 99.0%),
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purchased from Dojindo Molecular Technologies and the radical standard, 2,2,6,6-
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tetramethylpiperidine (TEMPO; 98.0%), purchased from Fisher Scientific were used
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without further purification. Sodium persulfate (Na2S2O8; > 98.0%), tert-Butyl alcohol (>
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99.9%), and nitrobenzene (99.5%) purchased from Fisher Scientific were used as
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received. The trityl was prepared following the method by Kutala et al.29 All stock
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solutions were prepared using Milli-Q deionized (DI) water buffered with sodium
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dihydrogen phosphate (NaH2PO4) and disodium hydrogen phosphate (Na2HPO4) at pH =
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3.5, 7.4, and 9.4. The phosphate buffer was selected due to its relatively slow reaction
111
rate with radicals30, 31 and inert reactivity toward the spin trap DMPO.25, 32, 33
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Experimental Setup
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The experimental setup is shown in Figure 1. A horn-type ultrasonic system
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(Sonic Dismembrator 550, Fisher Scientific) with a tip area of 1.2 cm2 was used to
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activate PS in a water-jacketed glass rosette reactor. A cooling bath (1006S, Fisher 6
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Scientific) was used to maintain the solution temperature at 20°C in the reactor. The
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sonicated solution was pumped into an Aqua-X multi-bore sample tube with closely
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spaced capillaries (Bruker) by a peristaltic pump (8 Roll Masterflex Pumphead, Cole-
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Parmer). The sample tube was placed in the cavity of a Bruker EMX Plus EPR
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spectrometer equipped with a high sensitivity resonator. Finally, the solution was
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circulated back to the reactor. The set-up was run as a closed system. The in-situ setup
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offers advantages such as simultaneous measurements of DMPO adduct formation
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without delay, the ability to maintain a closed system, and reliable monitoring of adduct
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decay in the US-PS system.
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Sonication and EPR Experiments
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Sequential batch experiments were conducted at different PS (0.1 ‒ 100.0 mM)
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and DMPO (1.0 ‒ 80.0 mM) concentrations. Prior to each experiment, a reactant solution
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(25 mL) was transferred into the reactor and purged with argon (99.9999%) for 5 min.
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Using a micro DO probe (Lazar Research Laboratories, Inc.), 99.4% of dissolved oxygen
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(DO) was removed in 5 min of argon purging (Figure S1 in the supporting information,
131
SI). Oxygen removal minimizes the formation of superoxide radical (O2•‒) and excludes
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its interference in experiments. The argon gas flow was stopped at the start of an
133
experiment to avoid entrainment of gas bubbles in the Aqua-X tube. Control experiments
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with an O2 sensitive probe compound, trityl,34 indicate there is no O2 intrusion into the
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closed system experimental set-up after argon purging was turned off (Figure S2). The
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ultrasonic power density (PD) was 1.5 W mL−1 with a sonication period of 10 ‒ 30 min. 7
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The radical adduct signals were acquired and analyzed using WINEPR software.35 All
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scans were carried out at room temperature with the following EPR instrument settings:
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sweep width, 120 G; power, 10.02 mW; modulation amplitude, 1.00 G; time constant,
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81.92 ms; conversion time, 40 ms; sweep time, 40.96 s; resolution in X, 1024; and
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resolution in Y, 20 ‒ 40. The spin trap of DMPO reacts with the short-lived radicals (R•,
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•
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longer, measureable life-times (Eq. 1):
OH or SO4•‒) that are generated in the US-PS system, thus forming spin adducts with
+
N
O
+
•
R
R
N
(1)
• O
-
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A typical EPR spectrum obtained containing DMPO•−OH and DMPO•−SO4− is shown in
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Figure 2. Hyperfine coupling constants (hfcc) for nitrogen ( a N ) and hydrogen ( a H )
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atoms were obtained by fitting the spectrum using WinSim. To quantify spin adducts in
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the US-PS system, TEMPO was used as a stable nitroxide radical standard. A 7-point
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calibration curve of TEMPO was prepared in buffer. The spin adduct concentrations in
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samples were then calculated by comparing integrated areas of all detected peaks with the
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best-fit linear regression fit of TEMPO peak areas. Select experiments were performed in
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triplicate; error between experiments was near or below 5%.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Radical Production in US-PS System 8
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Formation of radical species during sonication at different DMPO and PS
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concentrations was determined first. DMPO-radical adduct formation with respect to
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DMPO concentration is shown in Figure S3. DMPO•−OH and DMPO•−SO4− formation
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reached plateaus at 10 and 40 mM, respectively. The occurrence of the plateau at a higher
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DMPO concentration for SO4•‒ over •OH indicates that the trapping rate of SO4•‒ by
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DMPO may not be as fast as •OH. To ensure that DMPO adequately trapped both
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radicals, 40 mM of DMPO was utilized in this study unless noted otherwise.
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Adduct formation with sonication time in the absence and presence of PS is
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illustrated in Figure 3. DMPO•−OH and DMPO•−SO4− concentrations reached plateaus
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between 6 and 9 min of sonication. The plateaus indicate that formation and
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decomposition of adducts were in equilibrium. Overall, the DMPO•−OH yield in Figure 3
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was higher than the corresponding DMPO•−SO4− yield in this US-PS system consistent
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with Figure S3. Additionally, the DMPO•−OH yield in the presence of PS is nearly 3
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times that in the US system, suggesting a source of •OH production other than
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dissociation of water molecules in the gas phase of cavitation bubbles. Even though a
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higher concentration of trapping reagent was required to trap SO4•−, DMPO•−SO4− (~ 6
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min) adduct formation reached steady-state faster than DMPO•−OH (~ 9 min), as shown
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in Figure 3. In control experiments, obvious decay of spin adducts was observed in the
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US-PS system (see Text S1 and Figure S4). Decay kinetics were quantified and
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incorporated into our kinetic analysis.
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Two other radicals, •H and O2•‒/HO2•, were tested for their presence in the system.
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Negligible levels of •H in the presence of PS were detected due to their lack of formation, 9
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insufficient trapping by DMPO, or instability of the DMPO•−H adduct.36 Additionally,
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the relatively high PS concentration may compete with DMPO for consumption of •H
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through S2O82‒ + •H → H+ + SO42‒ + SO4•‒ (k = 2.5×107 M-1 s-1), resulting in a very small
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amount of DMPO•−H formation. Likewise, DMPO•−O2‒ was not detected in the US-PS
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system. At pH 7.4 used in these experiments, HO2• deprotonates to O2•‒ (pKa = 4.8).37 In
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the argon-purged system, production of •HO2 through •H + O2 → HO2• does not occur.
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Therefore, O2•‒ formation was primarily from reactions of •OH and/or SO4•‒ with H2O2
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through R10 and R20. At the high [DMPO] used, •OH and SO4•‒ were both sufficiently
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trapped by DMPO (Figure S3); thus, within our expectations, features in the EPR spectra
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consistent with DMPO•−O2‒ were not observed (Figure 2).
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Tables 1 and 2 summarize principal reactions in the US-PS system (R# indicates
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the assigned reaction number). According to these reactions and consistent with our
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observations, •OH and SO4•‒ are the major radical species formed. The higher •OH yield
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in the presence of PS as compared to the US-only system is attributed to the hydrolysis of
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SO4•‒ (R3), even though the ambient temperature rate constant (460 s‒1) is reported to be
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comparatively low.38 The dissolved PS ions do not partition into the high temperature gas
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phase of cavitation bubbles. However, when cavitation bubbles collapse producing
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temperatures on the order of 2000 ‒ 5000 K,39 the temperature from the collapse heats the
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liquid sheath surrounding the bubble, resulting in a higher temperature, pressure, and
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possible supercritical water zone in the interfacial region.40 Inside the supercritical water
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layer, the diffusivity and reactivity of PS ions is enhanced resulting in reduced activation
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energy for PS dissociation.41 Based on the Arrhenius equation, the reaction rate constant 10
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for R3 is elevated in the high temperature region surrounding these cavitation bubbles
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leading to the higher •OH yield.
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Generally, for any activation method, increasing the dose of PS results in
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improved radical production and consequently contaminant degradation but no relative
203
change in the ratio of formation of radicals.8,
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methods, our results in Figure S5 demonstrate that both DMPO•−OH and DMPO•−SO4−
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concentrations increase slightly as PS concentration increases. Yet, the ratio of radicals
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formed is similar (i.e., around 8) over the [PS] range tested. A consistent ratio of radical
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formation over a range of [PS] agrees well with other activation methods. Thus, it seems
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[PS] is not a determining factor for the radical distribution in US-PS systems.
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pH Effect on Radical Distribution in US-PS System
42, 43
Consistent with other activation
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The effect of solution pH on the ratio of •OH to SO4•‒ formed varies by activation
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method; thus, we explored the role of pH on the formation of •OH and SO4•‒. Radical
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production at pH 3.5 (acidic), 7.4 (neutral) and 9.4 (basic) in both US and US-PS systems
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is shown in Figure 4. Sulfate radical formation is similar at pH values tested and is lower
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than •OH formation. The •OH yield under US only is 50% or less than that in the US-PS
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system ([PS] = 1.0 mM), suggesting a significant amount of •OH was formed through
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hydrolysis of SO4•‒ in addition to sonochemically generated •OH. As described above,
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[DMPO] affects radical trapping (Figure S3). These experiments were performed at a
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lower DMPO concentration ([DMPO] = 5 mM) compared to changing [PS] experiments
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([DMPO] = 40 mM). As a result, less adduct formation, and particularly less
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DMPO•−OH formation was observed leading to a lower radical ratio. 11
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Clearly, •OH is the predominant radical species formed over the pH range tested.
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As shown in Figure 4, the ratio of •OH to SO4•‒ (ca. 5 ‒ 5.5) is similar at acidic and
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neutral pH, then doubled (ca. 10) at pH 9.4. The higher overall radical production at pH
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9.4 suggests a possible synergism between US and base activation of PS. In base
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activation of PS, the apparent PS activation to SO4•‒ by base is not obvious until pH >
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12.42 Our results indicate that US may accelerate base activation of PS at lower pH values
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(i.e., 9.4). Thus, US may reduce the amount of base used in the base PS ISCO
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technology.
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Although PS activation technologies are classified together, the technologies can
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form •OH and SO4•‒ at much different ratios and as pH changes. Metal catalyzed
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activation of PS usually requires acidic conditions so that metal ions are dissolved in
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solution.8 •OH is preferentially formed with ratios of •OH to SO4•‒ as high as 6 in Fe(II)-
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EDTA activation of PS.8 The preferential formation of •OH is comparable to our US-PS
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results in which we observed a ratio of •OH to SO4•‒ between 5 and 8 at pH values
235
between 3.5 and 7.4. In thermal and base activation of PS, SO4•‒ is the dominant radical
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species at pH values at and below 7. Due to base catalyzed hydrolysis of SO4•‒, the
237
amount of •OH formed increases with pH becoming the dominant radical formed at pH
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values greater than 12.42, 43 In base activation studies, hydroxyl radical production at pH
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12 is up to 6 times that observed between pH 2 to 7.42 Similar to thermal activation, we
240
observed the ratio of •OH to SO4•‒ from US activation to increase as pH increased,
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primarily due to an increase in •OH formation. However, the high •OH production at
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acidic and neutral pH indicates that the US-PS system will have different reactivity than 12
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thermal activation that produces primarily SO4•‒ at acidic and neutral pH values. Our
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results also indicate that US activation will be effective for contaminants prone to •OH
245
attack rather than the more selective SO4•‒.44
246 247
Thermal Activation at the Bubble-Water Interface
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Collapsing cavitation bubbles are extremely hot and dynamic micro-reactors with
249
mean gaseous temperatures estimated to be 3400 K at collapse in an ambient temperature
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bulk aqueous solution.45 Due to this high localized temperature at collapse, spatially and
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temporally heterogeneous radical formation occurs. Due to temporal and spatial
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heterogeneity, large cooling rates and gradients in heat and radicals are present.23 Since
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PS is non-volatile and PS dissociation is negligible in ambient temperature bulk solution,3
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the observed formation of SO4•‒ should occur in the •OH rich and elevated temperature
255
regions at or near the bubble-water interface with heterogeneous temperature and radical
256
distribution.
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The compound, TBA, was used to probe the activation mechanism of PS. TBA
258
reacts slowly with SO4•‒ (k = 4.0 × 105 M-1 s-1; R24)31 but is an efficient scavenger of •OH
259
(k = 6.0 × 108 M-1 s-1; R25).30 Thus, at a high concentration of TBA, the reaction of •OH
260
with PS forming SO4•‒ is quenched, leaving only heat activation (R2) as the source of
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SO4•‒. Although a portion of TBA added into the sonicated solution will enter into the gas
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phase of the bubble and lower the gaseous collapse temperature (to 2800 K in the
263
presence of 100 mM TBA),45, 46 the corresponding reduced temperature at the interface is 13
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still far beyond that needed for PS dissociation. As shown in Figure S6, we observed no
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change in SO4•‒ production due to TBA addition. The insensitivity in SO4•‒ production to
266
the presence of TBA supports the hypothesis that thermal dissociation of PS (R2) is the
267
dominant reaction pathway forming SO4•‒ at the bubble-water interface.
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The thermal dissociation rate constant of PS ( k 2 ) cannot be determined directly
269
since EPR measures the DMPO•−SO4‒ adduct in aqueous solution. In order to quantify
270
thermal dissociation of PS due to cavitation, a kinetic model was developed to probe the
271
activation reaction and fit the dissociation rate in aqueous solution. For this analysis, the
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40 mM DMPO concentration used assured that the free radicals in the US-PS system
273
were fully trapped. As detailed in Text S2, a linear relationship between the observed rate
274
constant for DMPO•−SO4− formation, k obs, DMPO-SO4- , and [S2O82− ] was formulated using a
275
steady-state approach:
276
k obs, DMPO-SO4- =
k13 k14 k1k 4 × [S2 O 82− ] + k17 + k 4 [DMPO] k 21 k 22
k k [DMPO] + 2 4 − k hyd, DMPO-SO4- k17 + k 4 [DMPO]
277 278
(2a)
Or, k obs, DMPO-SO4- = M × [S 2 O 82− ] + N
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M=
(2b)
k13 k14 k1k 4 , + k17 + k 4 [DMPO] k 21 k 22
N=
k 2 k 4 [DMPO] − k hyd, DMPO-SO4- , k17 + k 4 [DMPO]
280
where
281
k hyd, DMPO-SO4- = k5 [DMPO • − SO 4− ] . By altering the PS concentration, we obtained
282
concentration dependent zero-order rate constants, k obs, DMPO -SO4 - , as shown in Figure 5a. 14
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Given parameter constants M and N, the first-order reaction rate constant for PS
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dissociation was calculated and reported in Table 1 as k 2, obs . In addition, Eq. (2) was
285
used to estimate the equilibrium adduct concentration at different PS loadings if assuming
286
the same equilibrium time for the batch run as observed in Figure 3. The comparable
287
adduct concentrations between estimated and observed results in Figure 3 confirmed the
288
validity of the developed kinetic model. Since we did not monitor the adduct formation at
289
PS concentrations from 10 to 100 mM, the extrapolation of Eq. (2) is not reliable in this
290
concentration range.
291 292
In the same way, we obtained the following expression for the observed DMPO•−OH adduct formation rate constant ( k obs, DMPO-OH ): k obs, DMPO-OH = M ' ×[S 2 O 82− ] + N'
293
M' =
(3) k1k 3 k 4 [DMPO] 2
k13 k14 + k k 21 22
294
where
295
k2 N ' = + k1 + k hyd, DMPO -SO4- − k hyd, DMPO -OH k 4 [DMPO]
296
k hyd, DMPO -OH = k 6 [DMPO • − OH] . Eq. (3) also indicates a linear relationship between
297
k obs, DMPO - OH and [S2 O8 ] , as confirmed in Figure 5b. Using Eq. (3), k 3, obs was
298
determined. As shown in Table 1, k 3, obs is two orders of magnitude larger than k 5, obs ,
299
suggesting that DMPO•−OH formation is dominated by hydrolysis of SO4•‒ forming •OH.
300
Therefore, the potential artifact of DMPO•−SO4− hydrolysis contributing to DMPO•−OH
301
production does not appear to be significant in our US-PS system and thus, our results
,
,
and
2−
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indicate that •OH is the dominant radical. Additionally, the rate constant, k 4, obs , in our
303
system was determined using kinetic modeling and fitting. No experimentally reported
304
values exist for k 4, obs . The k 4, obs in Table 1 confirms that the reaction of DMPO with
305
SO4•‒ is slower than with •OH as Figures 3 and S3 indicate. With this kinetic analysis,
306
we quantitatively determined the thermal activation rate of PS in ultrasonically irradiated
307
solution and kinetic rate constants of key reactions that are not reported in the literature.
308
Role of Free Radicals in Activation
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Radical recombination reactions, shown in Table 2, may also alter SO4•‒
310
production and subsequent contaminant oxidation. For example, excess •OH may reduce
311
SO4•‒ formation due to the reaction of the two radical species (R18). To evaluate the
312
effects of •OH on SO4•‒ formation (R13) and decay (R18), the probe compound of NB
313
was used. Based on its high hydrophobicity (log KOW = 1.86), we assume that NB
314
accumulates on the bubble-water interface and scavenges •OH (R27) there.47 NB is not
315
expected to scavenge SO4•‒ due to its low reaction rate constant with SO4•‒ (R26). Thus,
316
the presence of NB in solution interrupts R13 and R18 and ultimately alters
317
DMPO•−SO4− formation. Additionally, at high [DMPO], radical concentrations are very
318
low and R18 will be negligible compared with R13. Thus, [DMPO] = 1 mM, which fell
319
in the linear region of Figure S3, was used to determine if both R13 and R18 play roles in
320
SO4•‒ production.
321
Comparative adduct formation in the absence and presence of NB was used to
322
explore radical activation of PS. As shown in Figure 6, an obvious reduction was 16
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observed for both adducts with NB present. The decrease in DMPO•−OH concentration
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was attributed to scavenging of •OH by NB. This decrease in •OH lowered its reaction
325
with PS (R13) resulting in a reduced DMPO•−SO4− concentration. The decrease in
326
DMPO•−SO4− concentration at two initial NB concentrations was not significantly
327
different confirming that NB did not react with SO4•‒. Even under a low concentration of
328
spin trap reagent, the concentrations of •OH and SO4•‒ were relatively low compared to
329
PS, as evidenced by the fact that the adduct concentration was less than 1% of the DMPO
330
concentration. Therefore, R13 has a higher reaction rate and out-competes R18 in spite of
331
a higher reaction rate constant for the latter reaction. This comparative test verified that
332
•
333
and •OH (R18). Additionally, the difference in DMPO•−SO4− concentration in the
334
presence and absence of NB suggests that •OH activation of PS accounts for at most 30%
335
of the SO4•‒ production.
336
Assessing the Thickness and Effective Temperature of the Bubble-Water Interface
337
for PS Activation
OH activation of PS through R13 is prevalent over radical combinations between SO4•‒
338
The reaction site for both thermal and radical activation of PS is the bubble-water
339
interface. The observed rate constants ( k obs ) from EPR measurements reported in Table 1
340
are those measured in the total reactor solution volume. Thus, a conversion from
341
observed reaction rates to the rate constants in the reactive volume (i.e., k int at the
342
interface) is needed. Using a simple mass balance approach, the following expression
343
relates k int to k obs : 17
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344
k int =
V total k obs Vint
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(4)
345
where Vtotal is the total solution volume (25 mL) and Vint is the volume of interfacial
346
shell surrounding cavitation bubbles.
347
To assess the total volume of the interfacial region, we estimated the total number
348
of active cavitation bubbles in our reactor and the thickness of the interface of the
349
cavitation bubbles. We assumed: (1) all cavitation bubbles are spherical with bubble sizes
350
as in Colussi et al.;48 (2) heat transfer is instantaneous across the interface;23 (3) the
351
thickness of the interfacial shell is 10% of the radius of cavitating bubbles;49 (4) bubble-
352
bubble interactions are negligible; and (5) all reactions occurred at the interface and
353
formed adducts were immediately released from the compact interfacial region to bulk
354
solution following collapse of the cavitation bubbles.
355
As described in Text S3 of the SI, the total number of bubbles present in the
356
reactor was estimated using an acoustic emission method based on hydrophone
357
measurements.50 The number of cavitating bubbles was estimated from the
358
sonochemiluminescence volume and an analysis as described in Text S4 in the SI.48 For
359
our operational conditions, the number density ( ρ N ) of cavitation bubbles was calculated
360
to be 1.73 × 106 mL-1, which falls within the predicted range of 106 ‒ 108 mL-1 for a horn
361
type ultrasonic system driven at 20 kHz.51,
362
R0 = 2.0 µm and the interface thickness ( wint ) is 10% of the radius of the bubble,
363
wint = 0.2 µm and Vint =
[
52
Assuming a cavitating bubble radius
]
4π 3 3 × (R0 + wint ) − R0 × ρ N × Vcloud = 2.36 × 10 −5 mL for all 3
18
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364
cavitation bubbles in the cloud ( Vcloud = 1.23mL ) below horn tip. Therefore, the rate
365
constants at the interface, k int , were calculated to be 6 orders of magnitude
366
( 25mL / 2.36 × 10 −5 mL ≈ 10 6 ) greater than the observed values in aqueous solution (Table
367
1). Substituting these interfacial k values into Eqs. (S4b and 6b), the concentrations of
368
•
369
water interface, respectively. At the hot bubble-water interface, the hydrolysis of SO4•‒
370
(R3) was much faster compared to reported values at ambient conditions (R17) resulting
371
in higher •OH yields in our system (Figures S3 and 3).
OH and SO4•‒ were calculated to be 1.20 × 10‒10 M and 1.10 × 10‒10 M at the bubble-
372
Using k 2, int and the Arrhenius equation, the effective mean temperature of the
373
interfacial region was estimated. Johnson et al. determined Arrhenius parameters for the
374
thermal dissociation of PS:3
375
lnk = lnA − E a / RT
(5)
376
where lnA = 33.6, E a = 134 kJ M-1, R = 8.314 J K-1 M-1, and T is the temperature (K).
377
Using Eq. (5) and k 2, int , the corresponding temperature was calculated to be 340 K.
378
Although the interfacial zone will have a steep temperature gradient between the hot
379
cavitation bubble and the ambient temperature of the bulk solution, we consider 340 K to
380
be the mean effective temperature of the interfacial region with a thickness of 10% of the
381
bubble radius for PS dissociation.
382
Others have reported much larger temperatures such as 1900 K in interfacial
383
regions of cavitation bubbles.27, 28 Our estimated effective temperature of 340 K is far
384
below the reported interfacial temperature. It is likely that the interfacial region for PS 19
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385
dissociation extends a much larger distance into bulk solution compared to previous
386
reports24, 25 due to the thermal instability of PS even at relatively low temperatures (e.g.,
387
303 K).3 The assumption that the interfacial shell is 10% of the radius of cavitating
388
bubbles may not fully reflect the PS activating system, but it allows a starting point for
389
interpreting the reactivity of PS at the bubble-water interface. In any case, it is evident
390
that an interfacial region, or reactive region, varies depending on the specific reaction: a
391
reaction which requires a high temperature and is diffusion limited necessitates a
392
relatively small and higher temperature interfacial region, or vice versa. Therefore, more
393
complete modeling of the temperature and reactivity distribution in the interfacial region
394
surrounding a cavitation bubble is recommended.
395 396
ENVIRONMENTAL APPLICATIONS
397
This systematic investigation of ultrasonic activation of PS is of fundamental
398
importance to understand the activation mechanisms in cavitating bubble systems.
399
Cavitation-induced heating decomposes PS to SO4•‒, while •OH reaction with PS plays a
400
minor role in SO4•‒ formation. At the bubble-water interface (T ≈ 340 K), the hydrolysis
401
of SO4•‒ is significant leading to a high •OH yield, which is unique as compared to heat-,
402
base- or catalyst-activated systems. To promote the application of US-PS in ISCO, the
403
potential effects of subsurface solids (e.g., iron oxide and clay) on PS activation should
404
be examined. In contrast with the drawbacks of attenuated ultrasonic intensity, presence
405
of mineral solids may serve as catalysts resulting in synergism for enhanced radical 20
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production and subsequent contaminant degradation.53 Finally, the concept of ISCO using
407
US-PS may be implemented with ultrasonic units via a direct push type technology and
408
PS flooding at the contamination site.
409 410 411 412
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Funding from Ohio Sea Grant College Program (R/PS-050) is gratefully acknowledged.
413 414
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
415
Description of DO depletion during argon purging, EPR spectrum of trityl, spin
416
adduct decay with time, kinetic calculations of •OH and SO4•‒ formation using steady-
417
state approach, estimation of number for total bubbles using acoustic emission method,
418
estimation of number for cavitation bubbles, adduct formation at different DMPO and PS
419
concentrations, and DMPO•−SO4− adduct formation in the absence and presence of TBA
420
are provided in the supporting information.
421 422 423 424
REFERENCES
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425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468
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33. Lee, H.; Lee, H. J.; Jeong, J.; Lee, J.; Park, N. B.; Lee, C., Activation of persulfates by carbon nanotubes: Oxidation of organic compounds by nonradical mechanism. Chem. Eng. J. 2015, 266, 28-33. 34. Bobko, A. A.; Dhimitruka, I.; Eubank, T. D.; Marsh, C. B.; Zweier, J. L.; Khramtsov, V. V., Trityl-based EPR probe with enhanced sensitivity to oxygen. Free Radical Bio. Med. 2009, 47 (5), 654-658. 35. Duling, D. R., Simulation of multiple isotropic spin-trap EPR spectra. J. Magn. Reson. Ser. B 1994, 104 (2), 105-110. 36. Gutierrez, M.; Henglein, A.; Dohrmann, J. K., H atom reactlons in the sonolysis of aqueous solutions. J. Phys. Chem. 1987, 91, 6687-6690. 37. Bielski, B. H. J.; Cabelli, D. E.; Arudi, R. L.; Ross, A. B., Reactivity of HO2/O2radicals in aqueous solution. J. Phys. Chem. Ref .Data 1985, 14 (4), 1041-1100. 38. Yu, X. Y.; Bao, Z. C.; Barker, J. R., Free radical reactions involving Cl•, Cl2•, and SO4−• in the 248 nm photolysis of aqueous solutions containing S2O82- and Cl-. J. Phys. Chem. A 2004, 108 (2), 295-308. 39. Ashokkumar, M.; Grieser, F., A comparison between multibubble sonoluminescence intensity and the temperature within cavitation bubbles. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127 (15), 5326-5327. 40. Hua, I.; Hochemer, R. H.; Hoffmann, M. R., Sonolytic hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl acetate - the role of supercritical water. J. Phys. Chem. 1995, 99, (8), 2335-2342. 41. Kritzer, P.; Dinjus, E., An assessment of supercritical water oxidation (SCWO) Existing problems, possible solutions and new reactor concepts. Chem. Eng. J. 2001, 83 (3), 207-214. 42. Furman, O. S.; Teel, A. L.; Ahmad, M.; Merker, M. C.; Watts, R. J., Effect of basicity on persulfate reactivity. J. Environ. Eng. ASCE 2011, 137 (4), 241-247. 43. Liang, C. J.; Su, H. W., Identification of sulfate and hydroxyl radicals in thermally activated persulfate. Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 2009, 48 (11), 5558-5562. 44. Xiao, R.; Ye, T.; Wei, Z.; Luo, S.; Yang, Z.; Spinney, R., Quantitative structureactivity relationship (QSAR) for the oxidation of trace organic contaminants by sulfate radical. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2015, 49, 13394-13402. 45. Ciawi, E.; Rae, J.; Ashokkumar, M.; Grieser, F., Determination of temperatures within acoustically generated bubbles in aqueous solutions at different ultrasound frequencies. J. Phys. Chem. B 2006, 110 (27), 13656-13660. 46. Tauber, A.; Mark, G.; Schuchmann, H. P.; von Sonntag, C., Sonolysis of tert-butyl alcohol in aqueous solution. J. Chem. Soc. Perkin Trans. 2 1999, 6, 1129-1135. 47. Sivasankar, T.; Moholkar, V. S., Physical insights into the sonochemical degradation of recalcitrant organic pollutants with cavitation bubble dynamics. Ultrason. Sonochem. 2009, 16, 769-781. 48. Colussi, A. J.; Weavers, L. K.; Hoffmann, M. R., Chemical bubble dynamics and quantitative sonochemistry. J. Phys. Chem. A 1998, 102 (35), 6927-6934. 49. Kamath, V.; Prosperetti, A.; Egolfopoulos, F. N., A theoretical study of sonoluminescence. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1993, 94 (1), 248-260. 50. Pandit, A. B.; Varley, J.; Thorpe, R. B.; Davidson, J. F., Measurement of bubble size distribution - An acoustic technique. Chem. Eng. Sci. 1992, 47 (5), 1079-1089. 24
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51. Dubus, B.; Vanhille, C.; Campos-Pozuelo, C.; Granger, C., On the physical origin of conical bubble structure under an ultrasonic horn. Ultrason. Sonochem. 2010, 17 (5), 810-818. 52. Znidarcic, A.; Mettin, R.; Dular, M., Modeling cavitation in a rapidly changing pressure field – Application to a small ultrasonic horn. Ultrason. Sonochem. 2015, 22, 482-492. 53. Ahmad, M.; Teel, A. L.; Watts, R. J., Persulfate activation by subsurface minerals. J. Contam. Hydrol. 2010, 115 (1-4), 34-45. 54. Jiang, P. Y.; Katsumura, Y.; Nagaishi, R.; Domae, M.; Ishikawa, K.; Ishigure, K.; Yoshida, Y., Pulse radiolysis study of concentrated sulfuric acid solutions - Formation mechanism, yield and reactivity of sulfate radicals. J. Chem. Soc. Faraday Trans. 1992, 88 (12), 1653-1658.. 55. Klaning, U. K.; Sehested, K.; Appelman, E. H., Laser flash photolysis and pulse radiolysis of aqueous solutions of the fluoroxysulfate ion, SO4F-. Inorg. Chem. 1991, 30 (18), 3582-3584. 56. Li, B. Z.; Li, L.; Lin, K. F.; Zhang, W.; Lu, S. G.; Luo, Q. S., Removal of 1,1,1trichloroethane from aqueous solution by a sono-activated persulfate process. Ultrason. Sonochem. 2013, 20 (3), 855-863. 57. Finkelstein, E.; Rosen, G. M.; Rauckman, E. J., Spin trapping - Kinetics of the reaction of superoxide and hydroxyl radicals with nitrones. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1980, 102 (15), 4994-4999. 58. Neta, P.; Madhavan, V.; Zemel, H.; Fessenden, R. W., Rate constants and mechanism of reaction of SO4.- with aromatic compounds. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1977, 99 (1), 163-164.
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Table 1: Experimentally determined rate constants Rate constant a
R# Reaction )))
kobs
kint b
1
H2O ሱሮ •OH + •H
1.3×10-8 M s-1
1.4×10-2 M s-1
2
S2O82‒ ሱۛሮ 2 SO4•‒ SO4•‒ + H2O → H+ + SO42‒ + •OH DMPO + SO4•‒ → DMPO•−SO4− DMPO•−SO4−+ H2O → DMPO•−OH + H+ + SO42‒ DMPO•−OH → Product
୦ୣୟ୲
1.5×10-11 s-1
1.6×10-5 s-1
0.15 s-1 0.027 M-1 s-1 8.4×10-4 s-1 1.0×10-3 s-1
1.6×105 s-1 2.9×104 M-1 s-1 8.9×102 s-1 1.1×103 s-1
3 4 5 6
Note: a M s-1, s-1, and M-1 s-1 are units for zero-, first-, and second-order reaction rate constants, respectively; b k values are corrected for reactions at the bubble-water interface (effective temperature of ~340 K), whereas kobs values are EPR measured values in sonicated solution purged with argon (Temperature = 293 K and pH = 7.4).
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Table 2: Principal reactions in US-PS system Rate constant, M-1 s-1 7.0×109 5.5×109 7.8×109
R# 7 8 9
Reaction • OH + •H → H2O • OH + •OH → H2O2 • H + •H → H2
10
OH + H2O2 → H2O + H+ + O2•‒ • H + H2O2 → H2O + •OH • OH + H2 → H2O + •H S2O82‒ + •OH → H+ + SO42‒ + SO4•‒ + 1/2O2 S2O82‒ + •H → H+ + SO42‒ + SO4•‒ S2O82‒ + SO4•‒ → SO42‒ + S2O8•‒ 2 SO4•‒ → S2O82‒ SO4•‒ + H2O → H+ + SO42‒ + •OH SO4•‒ + •OH → HSO5‒ → H+ + SO42‒ + 1/2O2 SO4•‒ + •H → H+ + SO42‒
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
•
•‒ SO4•‒ + H2O2 → 2H+ + SO42‒ + O2 DMPO + •OH → DMPO•−OH DMPO + •H → DMPO•−H DMPO + •O2‒ → DMPO•−O2‒ (CH3)3COH + SO4•‒ → Product (CH3)3COH + •OH → Product (C6H5)NO2 + SO4•‒ → Product (C6H5)NO2 + •OH → Product
a
Ref. b 30 30 30
2.7×107
30
9.0×107 4.2×107 < 1×106 2.5×107 6.6×105 4.4×108 460 s-1 9.5×109 1.0×1010
30 30 30 54 54 55 38 55, 56 30, 55
1.2×107
56
2.8×109 3.8×109 10 4.0×105 6.0×108 < 106 3.9×109
26 30 57 31 30 58 30
Note: a units for zero- (M s-1) and first-order (s-1) reaction rate constants were noted otherwise; b k values are at ambient temperature unless noted otherwise.
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Figure Captions
Figure 1: Experimental setup for in-situ EPR measurements of sonicated solution. 1 — Transducer; 2 — Horn; 3 — Argon gas inlet; 4 — Reactor; 5 — •OH; 6 — SO4•−; 7 — DMPO; 8 — Peristaltic pump; 9 — EPR spectrometer; 10 — Aqua-X tube; 11 — Spectrum. Figure 2: EPR spectrum of sonicated persulfate. PS = 100 mM; DMPO = 40 mM; PD = 1.5 W mL-1; ● — DMPO•−OH,
= 15.01, aβ-H =14.72; ▲ —DMPO•−SO4−,
aN
=
13.67, aβ-H =10.24, aγ-H1 = 1.52, aγ-H2 = 0.79. The hyperfine coupling constants of
a
aN
were obtained by fitting spectra using WinSim. Figure 3: DMPO adduct formation with sonication time. ●— DMPO•−OH at 100 mM persulfate; ▲ — DMPO•−SO4− at 100 mM persulfate; ■ — DMPO•−OH at 1 mM persulfate; ▼— DMPO•−SO4− at 1 mM persulfate; ★ — DMPO•−OH under sonication only; DMPO = 40 mM; pH = 7.4; PD = 1.5 W mL−1. No measurable DMPO•−OH and DMPO•−SO4− were produced without sonication or trapping reagent of DMPO. Figure 4: pH effect on the adduct formation in US and US-PS systems. DMPO = 5 mM; PS = 1 mM; PD = 1.5 W mL−1; sonication time = 17 min. Figure 5: Linear relationship between initial zero-order formation rate constants and persulfate concentrations for DMPO•−SO4− (a) and DMPO•−OH (b). DMPO = 40 mM; pH = 7.4; PD = 1.5 W mL−1; sonication time = 17 min.
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Figure 6: Adduct formation in the absence and presence of nitrobenzene (NB). DMPO = 1 mM; PS = 1 mM; pH = 7.4; PD = 1.5 W mL−1; sonication time = 17 min; DMPO•−OH measurements are significantly different, while there is no significant difference for DMPO•−SO4− formation in the presence of 0.1 mM and 1.0 mM NB.
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Figure 1: Experimental setup for in-situ EPR measurements of sonicated solution. 1 — Transducer; 2 — Horn; 3 — Argon gas inlet; 4 — Reactor; 5 — •OH; 6 — SO4•−; 7 — DMPO; 8 — Peristaltic pump; 9 — EPR spectrometer; 10 — Aqua-X tube; 11 — Spectrum.
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6
8.0x10
6
6.0x10
6
Intensity
4.0x10
6
2.0x10
0.0 6
-2.0x10
6
-4.0x10
6
-6.0x10
3460
3480
3500
3520
3540
3560
Magnetic Field, G Figure 2: EPR spectrum of sonicated persulfate. PS = 100 mM; DMPO = 40 mM; PD = 1.5 W mL-1; ● — DMPO•−OH,
= 15.01, aβ-H =14.72; ▲ —DMPO•−SO4−,
aN
=
13.67, aβ-H =10.24, aγ-H1 = 1.52, aγ-H2 = 0.79. The hyperfine coupling constants of
a
aN
were obtained by fitting spectra using WinSim.
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DMPO-OH Concentration, µM
15
10
5
0 0
5
10
15
20
0
5
10
15
20
-
DMPO-SO4 Concentration, µM
5 4 3 2 1 0
Sonication Time, min Figure 3: DMPO adduct formation with sonication time. ●— DMPO•−OH at 100 mM persulfate; ▲— DMPO•−SO4− at 100 mM persulfate; ■ — DMPO•−OH at 1 mM persulfate; ▼— DMPO•−SO4− at 1 mM persulfate; ★ — DMPO•−OH under sonication only; DMPO = 40 mM; pH = 7.4; PD = 1.5 W mL-1. No measurable DMPO•−OH and DMPO•−SO4− were produced without sonication or trapping reagent of DMPO. 32
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30 25
DMPO-OH (US only) DMPO-OH DMPO-SO4
10 8
20
6
15 4
Adduct Ratio
Adduct Concentration, µM
35
10 2
5 0
0
pH 3.5
pH 7.4
pH 9.4
Figure 4: pH effect on the adduct formation in US and US-PS systems. DMPO = 5 mM; PS = 1 mM; PD = 1.5 W mL−1; sonication time = 17 min.
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-8
1.0x10
kobs, DMPO-SO4-, M s
-1
(a) -9
8.0x10
-9
6.0x10
-9
4.0x10
-7
-9
y = 6.31×10 x + 1.82×10 2 R = 0.9712
-9
2.0x10
0.0 0
2
4
6
8
10
-8
3.0x10
kobs, DMPO-OH, M s
-1
(b) -8
2.8x10
-8
2.6x10
-7
-8
y = 4.26×10 x + 2.40×10 2 R = 0.9238
-8
2.4x10
-8
2.2x10
0
2
4
6
8
10
Persulfate Concentration, mM Figure 5: Linear relationship between initial zero-order formation rate constants and persulfate concentrations for DMPO•−SO4− (a) and DMPO•−OH (b). DMPO = 40 mM; pH = 7.4; PD = 1.5 W mL-1; sonication time = 17 min.
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Adduct Concentration, µM
8 DMPO-OH − DMPO-SO4
6
4
2
0 No NB
0.1mM NB
1.0 mM NB
Figure 6: Adduct formation in the absence and presence of nitrobenzene (NB). DMPO = 1 mM; PS = 1 mM; pH = 7.4; PD = 1.5 W mL-1; sonication time = 17 min; DMPO•−OH measurements are significantly different, while there is no significant difference for DMPO•−SO4− formation in the presence of 0.1 mM and 1.0 mM NB.
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