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Undiscovered Mechanism for Pyrogenic Carbonaceous Matter (PCM)-Mediated Abiotic Transformation of Azo dyes by Sulfide Han-Qing Zhao, Shi-Qi Huang, WENQING XU, YiRan Wang, Yi-Xuan Wang, Chuan-Shu He, and Yang Mu Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 25 Mar 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 25, 2019
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Undiscovered Mechanism for Pyrogenic Carbonaceous Matter (PCM)-Mediated
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Abiotic Transformation of Azo dyes by Sulfide
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Han-Qing Zhao1, Shi-Qi Huang1, Wen-Qing Xu2, Yi-Ran Wang1, Yi-Xuan Wang1,
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Chuan-Shu He1, Yang Mu1,*
6 7 8
1CAS
Key Laboratory of Urban Pollutant Conversion, Collaborative Innovation
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Centre of Suzhou Nano Science and Technology, Department of Applied Chemistry,
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University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, 230026, China
11 12
2Department
of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Villanova University, Villanova, Pennsylvania, 19085, United States
13 14 15 16 17 18
*Corresponding author:
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Prof. Yang Mu, Fax: +86 551 63607907; E-mail:
[email protected] 1
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ABSTRACT
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Pyrogenic carbonaceous matter (PCM) catalyzes the transformation of a range of
22
organic pollutants by sulfide in water; however, the mediation mechanisms are not
23
fully understood. In this study, we observed for the first time that the degradation of
24
azo dyes by sulfide initially underwent a lag phase followed by a fast degradation
25
phase. Interestingly, the presence of PCM only reduced the lag phase length of the
26
azo dye decolorization but did not significantly enhance the reaction rate in the fast
27
degradation phase. An analysis of the azo dye reduction and polysulfides formation
28
indicated that PCM facilitated the transformation of sulfide into polysulfides
29
including disulfide and trisulfide, resulting in fast azo dye reduction. Moreover, the
30
oxygen functional groups of the PCM, especially the quinones, may play an important
31
role in the transformation of sulfide into polysulfides by accelerating the electron
32
transfer. The results of this study provide a better understanding of the PCM-mediated
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abiotic transformation of organic pollutants by sulfide in anaerobic aqueous
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environments.
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Table of Contents (TOC) Art
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INTRODUCTION
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Sediments are important sinks for hydrophobic organic contaminants such as
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nitroaromatics, nitrogenous explosives, and azo dye discharged into surface waters.1-3
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On the other hand, hydrogen sulfide occurs naturally in sediments because of the
44
microbial reduction of sulfate and it was reported that sulfide is present in sediment
45
pore waters at concentrations ranging from tens of micromolar to several millimolar.4
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As a consequence, sulfide is able to act as both a nucleophile and a reductant in the
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abiotic transformation of organic pollutants in sediments.3, 5, 6
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Pyrogenic carbonaceous matter (PCM) includes engineered carbons (biochar,
49
activated carbon), environmental black carbon (fossil fuel soot, biomass char), and
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related carbon nanomaterials (graphene, carbon nanotubes (CNTs))7 and constitutes
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up to 10-30% of organic carbon in sediments.8 PCM may come in contact with
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organic pollutants due to its widespread presence in the aquatic environment or its use
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in various engineering applications.9-14 Previous studies have demonstrated that black
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carbon could sequester hydrophobic contaminants in sediments.8,
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recent studies showed that PCM and sulfide co-existing in sediments were able to
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foster the degradation of many hydrophobic organic pollutants.7 Related studies
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suggested that black carbon-mediated reactions occurred with a wide variety of
58
contaminant structures, including nitrated and halogenated aromatic compounds,
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halogenated heterocyclic aromatic compounds, and halogenated alkanes.16,
60
example, CNTs were used as a catalyst for the reduction of nitroaromatics by sulfide
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in water18 and black carbon facilitated the abiotic reduction of trifluralin and
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pendimethalin by sulfides. Very recently, it was found that 99% of trichloroethylene
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was converted to acetylene after 200 h using a sulfide reductant under the mediation 4
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Moreover,
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For
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of nitrogen-doped carbon materials.17
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The mechanisms responsible for the carbon material-mediated transformation of
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organic pollutants are complex. One hypothesis is that surface oxygen functional
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groups (especially quinone) promote the electron transfer between the sulfide and
68
contaminants sorbed to the carbon surfaces. For instance, Yu et al. indicated that the
69
reduction rate of nitrobenzene by sulfides was correlated with the oxygenated
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functional group prevalence on the char surfaces.19 Additionally, Aeschbacher et al.
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demonstrated that quinone moieties (likely occurring in black carbon) were key
72
participants in the transfer of electrons to/from humic substances.20 A related study
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proposed that activated carbon fibers enhanced the transformation of reduction of
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nitroaromatics by sulfides and the results indicated that quinone moieties in the
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carbon materials accelerated the electron transfer from the sulfides to the target
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contaminants.21 Another hypothesis is that the excellent electrical conductivity of the
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graphitic regions in carbon materials promotes the electron transfer from sulfide to the
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sorbed organic compounds.22 Oh and Chiu suggested that the conductive properties of
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sheet graphite promoted the contaminant reduction by sulfides.23 Additionally,
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regarding the degradation of the pollutant hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine
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(RDX), Xu et al. proposed that hydrogen sulfide was partially oxidized by carbon in a
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reaction enhanced by the carbon’s electrical conductivity to form potent sulfur-based
83
nucleophiles on the carbon surface (detected by energy dispersive spectroscopy),
84
which were capable of degrading the RDX; but the specific sulfur-based nucleophiles
85
have not been identified.24 However, Ding et al. found that sulfide combined with
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nitrogen-doped carbon materials could produce active intermediate C–S–S–H to
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facilitate trichloroethylene dechlorination.17
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In this study, we evaluated the reduction of azo dyes by sulfide in the presence 5
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and absence of PCM and discovered a new PCM-mediated reaction mechanism for
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azo dye removal from water. As an important commercial chemical, azo dyes are
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widely used in textile, leather, paper, and food industries and the toxicity of azo dyes
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pose a potential threat to human, aquatic animals, and plants.25,
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electron potential for the reduction of azo dyes to their constituent aromatic amines by
94
sulfide is -270 mV and the half-wave potential of azo dye reduction ranges between
95
-530 and -180 mV.27 In the absence of PCMs, the azo dye degradation by sulfide
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suffered from a long lag phase prior to a fast removal phase (named fast degradation
97
phase). Interestingly, the presence of PCMs significantly shortened the lag phase but
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the degradation rate of the azo dye (the fast degradation phase) remained the same.
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Furthermore, based on the azo dyes degradation experiments and the polysulfides
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formation analysis, it was found that PCM facilitated the transformation of sulfide
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into polysulfides, a process that played an important role during the azo dye
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degradation.
26
The standard
103 104 105
MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Materials
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Methyl orange (MO), meta-methyl red, (NH4)2Sn, sulfur, Na2S2O4, Na2S2O3,
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Na2SO3, and Na2SO4 were obtained from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd.
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(China) and the Na2S, Orange I, ortho-methyl red, para-methyl red, dimethyl
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trisulfide, anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS), and coenzyme Q10 were purchased
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from Aladdin Industrial Corporation (China). Moreover, dimethyl disulfide was
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purchased from TCI Development Co., Ltd (Shanghai, China). All chemicals were 6
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used as received without further purification.
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Multi-walled CNTs (10-20 μm length, 20-30 nm diameter, and higher than 95%
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purity) were purchased from XFNANO Materials Technology Company (China).
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Graphene oxide (GO, 0.55-1.2 nm thickness, 0.5-3 μm diameter, higher than 99%
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purity, and less than 3 layers), reduced graphene oxide (RGO, 1-3 nm thickness,
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larger than 50 μm diameter, higher than 98% purity, and less than 3 layers), and
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nitrogen-doped graphene (NG, 1-3 nm thickness, 2-10 μm diameter, higher than 98%
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purity, and less than 3 layers) were obtained from Chengdu Organic Chemicals
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(China), while the graphite (5000 mesh diameter and higher than 99.95% purity) was
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purchased from Aladdin Industrial Corporation (China). The biochar was produced
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from pinewood according to previous studies.28,
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for one day to remove moisture, the pinewood samples were cut into 1-2 mm pieces.
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The pieces were placed into a cylindrical quartz tube in an electric furnace and were
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pyrolyzed under an Ar2 flow of 1 L min-1. The temperature of the furnace was
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programmed to increase at a rate of approximately 5 °C min-1 and was held at 400 °C
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for 3 h.30 After cooling to room temperature, the charred materials were milled to
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approximately 0.15 mm and were sieved through a 100-mesh sifter. All the carbon
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materials were washed with nitric acid at 75 °C for 11 h before use in order to remove
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the residual metal catalysts.31, 32
29
Briefly, after being dried at 80 °C
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The specific surface functional groups of the PCM were measured using an
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ESCALAB 250 X-ray photoelectron spectrometer (XPS) (Thermo-VG Scientific Inc.,
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UK). The curve fitting was performed using a Gaussian-Lorentzian peak shape after
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subtracting a Shirley background.
137 138
Azo Dye Degradation Experiments 7
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The batch degradation experiments of the azo dye were conducted in 200-mL
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serum bottles containing 100 mL phosphate buffer solution (25 mM at pH 7.0);
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specific amounts of PCM were mixed in serum bottles and were then dispersed using
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an ultrasonic process for 10 min. The solution was purged with nitrogen for at least 30
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min to remove oxygen before placing it into the anaerobic operation box. Afterward, a
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certain amount of Na2S (stored in the anaerobic operation box) was added to the
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serum bottle. Then, a specific amount of MO was added to the reactor and the
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solution pH was adjusted to pH 7.2 using an HCl solution. The reaction was
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conducted using an orbital shaker with 200 rpm at room temperature in an anaerobic
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glove box with nitrogen atmosphere. The azo dye adsorption of the different types of
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PCM was also evaluated without the addition of Na2S.
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The decolorization of the various azo dyes including the MO, orange I,
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ortho-methyl red, meta-methyl red, and para-methyl red by sulfide was tested with
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and without the addition of CNTs (series 1). The effect of the CNT dosages on the
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MO degradation by sulfide was evaluated in series 2. Additionally, the impacts of
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various kinds of PCM on the MO reduction by sulfide were investigated in series 3.
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To determine which of the sulfur species affected the reduction of the azo dyes by
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sulfide, series 4 was performed to investigate the feasibility of different chemical
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states of sulfur species as a reductant to react with MO. To understand the relationship
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between the polysulfide concentration and the rate of MO degradation, series 5 was
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carried out to determine the effect of the polysulfide concentration on the MO
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reduction without CNTs. To determine whether the quinone groups of the PCM
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affected the transformation of sulfide to polysulfides, series 6 was used to evaluate the
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degradation of MO by sulfide by adding AQDS. The conditions of all experiments are
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summarized in Table S2. 8
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Identification of Polysulfides
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Voltammetric analyses with an electrochemical workstation (Bio-Logic Science
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Instruments, France) were carried out to detect the aqueous sulfur species. A
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three-electrode system consisting of an Ag/AgCl reference electrode, a Pt counter
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electrode, and an Au/Hg working electrode was used in the voltammetric analyses,
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which were conducted using the method of Brendel and Luther.33 The Au/Hg
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electrode (a commercial gold electrode was electroplated with a layer of mercury in
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0.1 M HgSO4 + 0.03 M H2SO4 electrolyte at a potential of -1.0 V versus a saturated
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calomel electrode for 200 s) was 2 mm in diameter. Briefly, three electrodes were
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inserted into the serum bottles reactor that had been pre-purged with O2-free N2 gas.
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Cyclic voltammetry (CV) was performed between -0.1 and -1.6 V (versus Ag/AgCl)
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at a scan rate of 1,000 mV s-1 with a 2-s conditioning step.34 The analyses were
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carried out in sets of at least 12 sequential scans at specific time intervals and the first
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five scans were discarded (allowing the electrode response to stabilize).
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The formation of polysulfides was analyzed using gas chromatography-mass
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spectrometry (GC-MS, Thermo, Trace DSQ II, USA) according to a previous study.35
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Prior to the analysis, the samples were pretreated with methyl iodide to derivatize the
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polysulfides to the corresponding dimethyl polysulfides. The GC-MS was equipped
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with an HP-5 capillary column (30 m × 0.32 mm × 0.25 mm). SPME fiber
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(DVB/CAR/PDMS) was purchased from the Supelco Company (USA). The
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following conditions were used: 1 μL sample injection, inlet temperature of 250 °C,
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mass selective detectors (MSD) transfer line temperature of 250 °C, MSD source
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temperature of 150 °C, initial column temperature of 40 °C (hold for 8 min) followed
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by 10 °C/min to 290 °C (hold for 2 min). The MSD was operated in electron impact 9
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mode at 70 eV to generate the mass spectra and was programmed to monitor the
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selected ion mass/charge (m/z) ratios in selective ion monitoring mode. Additionally,
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the standard curves of the disulfide and trisulfide were created by using dimethyl
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disulfide and dimethyl trisulfide standards, respectively.
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Chemical Analysis
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The liquid samples were collected at appropriate time intervals and were
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immediately filtered through a 0.22-µm membrane. The MO concentration was
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measured with a Cary 60 UV-Vis spectrophotometer (Agilent Technologies, USA) at
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a wavelength of 390 nm, where both the sulfide and polysulfides have insignificant
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absorption (Figure S1). High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) was used
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to determine the concentrations of the MO reductive products including
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N,N-dimethyl-p-phenylenediamine
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(4-ABS). The HPLC analysis was performed on an Agilent 1260 equipped with a 4.6
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× 250 mm Eclipse Plus C18 column and a diode array detector (Agilent Technologies,
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USA). The flow rate of the mobile phase was 0.8 mL min-1 and the detection
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wavelengths were 270 and 254 nm, respectively. Gradient elution was conducted at
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30 oC and the composition of the mobile phase (A: methanol and B: 0.1% acetic
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acid/0.1% ammonium acetate) was as follows: 0 min: 5% A and 95% B, 15 min: 20%
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A and 80% B, 30 min 100% A and 0% B, 38 min: 5% A and 95% B.
(DPD)
and
4-aminobenzenesulfonic
acid
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The sulfide concentration was determined using the methylene blue method.36 The
210
concentrations of sulfite, sulfate, and thiosulfate were analyzed with an ICSS-1000
211
ion chromatograph (Dionex, USA) with an AS14A column and an electrochemical
212
conductivity detector. A solution of 8 mM of Na2CO3 and 1 mM of NaHCO3 was
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used as an eluent at a flow rate of 1.0 mL min-1.37 The elemental sulfur from the 10
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samples was first extracted by n-hexane (2 mL sample and 1 mL n-hexane, volatile
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extraction for 20 mins) and then determined by HPLC. The HPLC analysis was
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performed on an Agilent 1260 equipped with a 4.6 × 250 mm Eclipse Plus C18
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column and a diode array detector, the mobile phase was 85% methanol and 15%
218
water with 1 mL min-1 flow rate and the detection wavelengths were 240 nm.
219 220 221 222
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Calculations The Gompertz model (Eq. 1) was used to simulate the degradation of MO by sulfide in the absence or presence of PCM. 𝐶𝑡
―𝑒 𝐶0 = 1 ― 𝐵 ∗ 𝑒
𝑘 ∗ (𝑡0 ― 𝑡) 𝐵
+1
(1)
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where Ct (mM) is the azo dye concentration at time t (min) and C0 (mM) is the initial
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azo dye concentration; t0 (min), k (min-1), and B are the three parameters that
226
determine the shape of the model. To be specific, t0 is the parameter that indicates the
227
lag phase of the azo dye degradation. The parameter k indicates the rate of MO
228
degradation in the fast degradation phase. As demonstrated in a previous study, B
229
indicates the potential of azo dye degradation in the experiments and was determined
230
as the ratio of the final degraded MO and the initial MO concentration.38
231 232 233
RESULTS
234 235
Azo Dye Decolorization by Sulfide with and without CNTs.
236
As shown in Figure 1a, the lag phase lasted 64.32±7.04 min for 0.5 mM MO
237
removal by sulfide in the absence of CNTs; subsequently, the MO concentration
238
sharply decreased within 35 min during the fast degradation phase (k of 0.150±0.011 11
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min-1). Interestingly, the lag phase for the MO decolorization was significantly
240
shortened after 100 mg L-1 CNT addition; the value of t0 decreased from 64.32±7.04
241
min to 13.31±6.05 min in the absence and the presence of CNTs respectively (Table
242
S1). It should be noted that the adsorption of MO on the CNTs was insignificant in
243
the presence of 100 mg L-1 CNTs (± 4.5%, Figure S2). On the other hand, the MO
244
decolorization rate in the fast degradation phase did not change markedly because the
245
k value only varied from 0.150±0.011 min-1 in the absence of CNTs to 0.168±0.019
246
min-1 in the presence of CNTs. Moreover, the major final products were identified as
247
DPD and 4-ABS and their concentrations increased with the decrease in the MO
248
concentration (Figure 1b), suggesting that the reductive cleavage of the MO azo bond
249
by sulfide occurred regardless of the CNT presence. The final concentrations of DPD
250
and 4-ABS were around 90% of the amount of MO degradation (0.5 mM) and less
251
than 10% of the imbalance in the products might be due to the adsorption of CNTs.39
252
As the CNT concentration increased from 0 to 150 mg L-1, the lag phase time for
253
the MO decolorization decreased from 64.32±7.04 to 6.90±0.53 min, whereas the k
254
value did not change significantly (Figure 1c and Table S1). Additionally, a similar
255
phenomenon was also observed in the decolorization of the various azo dyes
256
including Orange I, ortho-methyl red, meta-methyl red, and para-methyl red by
257
sulfide in the absence and presence of CNTs (Figure S3 and Table S1). Overall, the
258
presence of the CNTs significantly shortened the lag phase of the azo dye
259
decolorization, where it did not markedly improve the removal rate in the fast
260
degradation phase.
261 262 263
Effects of Different PCM Types on MO Decolorization by Sulfide. The adsorption of MO on various types of PCM was quantified in the presence 12
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of 100 mg L-1 biochar, 100 mg L-1 graphite, 20 mg L-1 GO, 20 mg L-1 RGO, and 20
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mg L-1 NG. The amount of MO adsorbed on the PCM was insignificant and varied
266
from 1.5% to 7.3%; the adsorption equilibrium was established in less than 10 min
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(Figure S2). As shown in Figure 1d, all types of PCM shortened the lag phase of the
268
MO decolorization by sulfide. Compared to the control without PCM addition, the lag
269
phase time was reduced by 13.82%, 68.13%, 87.25%, 88.88%, and 92.24% with the
270
addition of 100 mg L-1 graphite, 100 mg L-1 biochar, 20 mg L-1 GO, 20 mg L-1 RGO,
271
and 20 mg L-1 NG, respectively, suggesting that the NG exhibited the best efficacy to
272
shorten the lag phase of the azo dye MO decolorization by sulfide. Moreover,
273
regardless of the PCM type, the k value did not change significantly compared with
274
the control, which indicated that the addition of different PCM types did not markedly
275
improve the azo dye MO decolorization rate in the fast degradation phase.
276 277
MO Decolorization at Different Chemical States of the Sulfur Species.
278
The results indicate that the azo dye decolorization process with an obvious lag
279
and fast degradation phases may be due to the existence of intermediate products,
280
which gradually formed during the stagnate phase and facilitated the degradation of
281
the azo dyes in the fast degradation phase. A previous study has demonstrated the
282
formation of reactive organic sulfur groups between sulfide and humic acid.40
283
However, the XPS analysis indicated that the sulfur content on the surface of the
284
CNTs was less than 1% (Figure S4 and Table S3). This result implied that the reactive
285
organic sulfur groups of the CNTs did not likely play important roles during azo dye
286
decolorization by sulfide, although their formation could not be completely excluded.
287
In order to determine which sulfur species might act as intermediates of sulfide
288
reacting with the azo dyes, different sulfur species were screened for the MO 13
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degradation in the absence of PCM; the species included polysulfides, elemental
290
sulfur, thiosulfate, dithionite, sulfite, and sulfate (Figure 2). The MO concentration
291
changed slightly within 2 hr in the presence of elemental sulfur, thiosulfate, sulfite, or
292
sulfate. In contrast, the MO was decolorized in the presence of polysulfides or
293
dithionite. However, the reaction kinetics was too fast for the MO reduction by
294
dithionite, implying that dithionite may not be the intermediate of the sulfide
295
conversion during azo dye decolorization. The MO decolorization by polysulfides did
296
not exhibit a significant lag phase and had the same order of magnitude reaction rate
297
as the MO degradation by sulfide. This result suggested that polysulfides might act as
298
the intermediate product of sulfide for azo dye removal.
299
Interestingly, the addition of 1 mM elemental sulfur to the 8 mM sulfide solution
300
also reduced the lag phase of the MO degradation without a marked change in the
301
decolorization rate in the fast degradation phase (Figure 2), in which the t0 value of
302
8.96±0.88 min was significantly lower than 64.32±7.04 min for the control. Since it
303
was reported that sulfide reacted quickly with elemental sulfur to form polysulfides,41,
304
42
305
product during the azo dye decolorization by sulfide.
our result further supports the speculation that polysulfides were the intermediate
306 307
Identification of Polysulfides and the Critical Concentration for Fast MO
308
Decolorization.
309
In order to identify the intermediate product of sulfide for azo dye decolorization,
310
CV analyses were conducted. As shown in Figure S5, the CV spectrogram of MO
311
showed no oxidation peaks in the potential range between -0.7 and -0.4 V and
312
moreover, the signal intensity of MO was much lower than that of the polysulfides.
313
These results indicated that the existence of MO did not have a significant influence 14
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on the determination of the polysulfides by CV. As shown in Figure 3a, two oxidation
315
peaks at -0.55 and -0.59 V with intensities higher than 0.15 mA appeared at the
316
beginning of the fast degradation phase with or without the CNT addition. We further
317
conducted the CV analyses on various sulfur species including sulfide, polysulfides,
318
elemental sulfur, thiosulfate, dithionite, and sulfite. As shown in Figure 3b and 3c,
319
only the CV spectrogram of the polysulfides had two oxidation peaks at -0.55 and
320
-0.59 V respectively, suggesting that polysulfides were the intermediate product of
321
sulfide in the process of azo dye decolorization. In addition, the intensities of the two
322
oxidation peaks at -0.55 and -0.59 V gradually decreased with the reaction time when
323
polysulfides were used as the reductant for the azo dye MO decolorization (Figure 3d),
324
further implying the formation of polysulfides during the azo dye decolorization by
325
sulfide.
326
UV-visible absorption spectra have been commonly used to determine the
327
polysulfide concentration in previous studies but this method was not appropriate in
328
our study because of the absorption interference of azo dyes. Alternatively, the
329
formation of polysulfides was analyzed using GC-MS in this study. As shown in
330
Figure S6, the formation of disulfide, trisulfide, and tetrasulfide was observed and the
331
level of tetrasulfide was relatively low. Therefore, the concentrations of both disulfide
332
and trisulfide were monitored during azo dye decolorization by sulfide in the absence
333
and presence of CNTs. As shown in Figure 1a, in the absence of CNTs, it took about
334
80 min for the polysulfide concentration to increase from 0 to nearly 700 μM-S
335
during the MO decolorization process, in which the disulfide and trisulfide
336
concentrations increased from 0 to 120 μM, respectively (Figure 4a). In the presence
337
of 100 mg L-1 CNTs, the formation of polysulfides was accelerated. It only required
338
about 30 min for the polysulfide concentration to increase from 0 to more than 900 15
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μM-S (Figure 1a), whereas the concentrations of disulfide and trisulfide increased
340
from 0 to 180 μM, respectively (Figure 4b). Moreover, elemental sulfur also started to
341
accumulate in the fast degradation phase and its final concentration was around 1.5
342
mM, regardless of the addition of CNTs (Figure 4a and b). Additionally, as shown in
343
Figure 4, the calculated sulfur mass balance was about 90% during the MO
344
decolorization process in the absence and presence of CNTs. These results strongly
345
suggested that the intermediate polysulfide products, mainly disulfide and trisulfide,
346
played important roles in the fast degradation phase of MO decolorization and
347
moreover, the CNT addition markedly accelerated the polysulfide accumulation
348
process. In addition, the formation of elemental sulfur, 4-ABS, and DPD during MO
349
decolorization by sulfide indicated that a reduction reaction rather than a nucleophilic
350
one occurred between the polysulfides and azo dye.43 Furthermore, we found that
351
only a small amount of polysulfides, including 14.24±5.43 μM disulfide and
352
6.19±1.05 μM trisulfide, were formed within 30 min in the presence of 8 mM sulfide
353
and 100 mg L-1 CNTs without azo dye addition. This implied that the presence of azo
354
dye was a prerequisite for the enhanced formation of polysulfides in this study.
355
Subsequently, we investigated the MO degradation with different concentrations
356
of polysulfides to determine the critical polysulfide concentration to start the fast
357
degradation of MO. The degradation of MO by polysulfides was fitted by
358
pseudo-first-order kinetics (Figure S7). As shown in Figure 5, the kinetic rate constant
359
of the MO removal only increased from 0.0014 to 0.0028 min-1 as the polysulfide
360
concentration increased from 62 to 248 μM-S, whereas a significant increase in the
361
rate constant of the MO removal was observed when the polysulfide concentration
362
was higher than 248 μM-S. However, the rate constant growth tended to stabilize
363
when the polysulfide concentration was in the range of 600 to 1000 μM-S. 16
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364
Coincidentally, it was observed that the concentrations of the produced polysulfides
365
were close to this range in the fast degradation phase of MO decolorization by sulfide
366
with and without the CNT addition (Figure 1a). These findings indicated that the
367
polysulfides accumulated to a critical concentration when the fast degradation phase
368
started in the MO decolorization process.
369
Additionally, we further investigated the influence of the CNTs on the MO
370
reduction by polysulfides. As shown in Figure S8, the MO decolorization rate
371
changed non-significantly with the addition of the CNTs, suggesting that the CNTs
372
did not directly mediate the MO reduction by polysulfides. This further confirmed
373
that the presence of the CNTs did not markedly improve the reaction rate in the fast
374
degradation phase and that polysulfides played important roles in the MO
375
decolorization.
376 377
Effects of AQDS and Q10 Addition on MO Decolorization by Sulfide.
378
Previous studies indicated that the oxygen functional groups of the PCM affected
379
the pollutant conversion by sulfide.19, 20 In order to investigate the influence of the
380
oxygen functional groups on the azo dye degradation, AQDS with a semiquinone
381
structure and Q10 with oxidation state of the quinone were introduced during MO
382
decolorization by sulfide without PCM addition. As shown in Figure S9, the lag phase
383
of the MO decolorization was considerably shortened after the 1 mM AQDS addition
384
and the t0 value decreased from 64.32±7.04 min without AQDS to 24.05±0.65 min
385
with the AQDS. In addition, the k value also did not change significantly. Moreover,
386
the CV results suggested the accumulation of polysulfides in the fast degradation
387
phase of MO decolorization by sulfide with the AQDS addition (Figure S10a).
388
Furthermore, as shown in Figure S10b, the GC-MS quantification results 17
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389
demonstrated that the concentrations of disulfide and trisulfide increased with the
390
reaction time from 0 to more than 200 and 150 μM, respectively. Several studies
391
found PCM with abundant quinone-based functional groups by potentiometric
392
titration quantification and it was reported that CNTs with 12 h nitric acid treatment
393
had around 0.161 meq g-1 quinone groups.
394
quinone-based functional groups on the surface of the PCM might play important
395
roles in enhancing the formation of polysulfides during the azo dye decolorization
396
process by sulfide. However, the value of t0 only decreased from 64.32±7.04 min in
397
the absence of Q10 to 51.66±6.36 min in the presence of 0.01 mM Q10 (Figure S9),
398
indicating that Q10 did not markedly accelerate the formation of polysulfides and
399
consequently reduced the time of the stagnant phase in the MO decolorization process.
400
This may be attributed to the much lower solubility of Q10 than AQDS in water.
21,44
These results indicated that the
401 402 403 404
DISCUSSION Previous studies have shown that PCM facilitated the abiotic reduction of
405
organic pollutants, including nitroaromatics,16,
45
organic explosives,22,
406
halogenated organic insecticides47 by sulfide under anaerobic conditions. Moreover, it
407
was found that the degradation of the above-mentioned pollutants by sulfide always
408
corresponded to a pseudo-first-order kinetic reaction, which exhibits a relatively fast
409
degradation in the early stage of the reaction. In this study, for the first time, we found
410
that the degradation of azo dyes by sulfide initially underwent a lag phase followed by
411
a fast degradation phase. Interestingly, the PCM addition only reduced the length of
412
the lag phase of the azo dye decolorization but did not markedly improve the reaction
413
rate in the fast degradation phase. This implies an undiscovered mechanism for azo 18
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and
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dye removal by sulfide in the presence of PCM.
415
Based on various experiments and analyses, we found that polysulfides may be a
416
key intermediate product during azo dye decolorization by sulfide. Moreover, the
417
polysulfide concentration reached a critical value prior to the quick reaction with the
418
azo dye, resulting in a long lag phase. As shown in Figure 6, in the absence of PCM,
419
there was a direct reaction between the sulfide and azo dye with the formation of
420
polysulfides, which was a slow process. Therefore, a relatively long period was
421
required for the accumulation of polysulfides to a critical concentration, resulting in a
422
long lag phase of azo dye decolorization. When the polysulfide concentration reached
423
the critical value, the azo dye was quickly decolorized (i.e., fast degradation phase)
424
with the formation of elemental sulfur. Subsequently, the elemental sulfur reacted
425
rapidly with sulfide to form polysulfides again, resulting in a sulfur cycle until the
426
decolorization process stopped. In the presence of PCM, carbon materials accelerated
427
the electron transfer between the sulfide and azo dye through their surface oxygen
428
functional groups (especially quinone) as an electron mediator, leading to the rapid
429
formation of polysulfides up to the critical concentration (similar to that without PCM
430
addition), resulting in a short lag phase for azo dye decolorization. On the other hand,
431
after the polysulfide concentration reached the critical value, the decolorization rate of
432
azo dye was similar in the presence and the absence of PCM in the fast degradation
433
phase, as indicated in Figure 1a. Interestingly, the NG exhibited the best efficacy to
434
shorten the lag phase of the azo dye decolorization by sulfide (Figure 1d). In addition
435
to the large number of oxygen-containing groups (such as quinone) in the NG, it has
436
been reported that nitrogen atoms incorporated into graphene networks remarkably
437
enhanced its conductivity, thereby facilitating the electron transfer.48-50 Therefore,
438
compared to other types of PCM, the presence of NG resulted in better performance 19
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439
in terms of the electron transfer between sulfide and azo dye and facilitated the
440
formation of polysulfides, leading to the best efficacy and shortening of the lag phase
441
of azo dye decolorization by sulfide. In a previous study, Xu et al. found that the
442
electrical conductivity rather than the oxygen functional groups played an important
443
role in the sulfide being oxidized to products that served as potent nucleophiles and
444
the oxidized sulfur species promoted the pollutant’s RDX transformation.24 In
445
contrast, many other studies indicated that PCM mainly acted as an electron shuttle to
446
mediate the pollutants’ transformation by sulfide through active oxygen functional
447
groups19,
448
compounds were more likely to act as reductants instead of nucleophiles to form
449
intermediate products.21 These results strongly indicate the existence of different
450
reaction pathways for the transformation of various organic pollutants by sulfide in
451
the presence of PCM, which deserves more study.
21
or conductive graphitic regions.51,
52
Some studies suggested that sulfur
452
The results of this study provide new information on the transformation
453
pathways of organic pollutants in anaerobic aqueous environments; the discovered
454
mechanism may also occur in other organic pollutants, although this requires further
455
investigation. Moreover, the findings of this study provide new insights into the
456
influence of PCM on the transformation of organic pollutants in anaerobic aqueous
457
conditions. Additionally, the results improve our understanding of the roles of sulfur
458
species in the transformation of pollutants in natural environments.
459 460 461
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
462
The authors wish to thank the Natural Science Foundation of China (51538012,
463
51821006 and 41728007), and the Program for Changjiang Scholars and Innovative 20
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Research Team in University, China for financially supporting this study.
465 466 467
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
468
Table S1, Estimated kinetic values for the decolorizaiton of various azo dyes under
469
different conditions; Table S2, Summary of operational conditions for various
470
experiments; Table S3, Contents of different elements on the surface of CNTs that
471
participated in azo dye decolorization process; Figure S1, UV spectrograms of sulfide,
472
polysulfides and MO.; Figure S2, MO adsorption on different PCMs including 100
473
mg L-1 biochar, 100 mg L-1 graphite, 20 mg L-1 GO, 20 mg L-1 RGO, or 20 mg L-1 NG
474
(pH 7.2, and 0.5 mM MO); Figure S3, Different azo dyes degradation by sulfide with
475
and without addition of CNTs (0.5 mM MO, 8 mM sulfide, 100 mg L-1 CNTs if
476
added, and pH 7.2), the lines were fitted by Gompertz model; Figure S4, Full-scale
477
XPS profile of CNTs that participated in MO decolorization process by sulfide;
478
Figure S5, CV spectrograms of 0.5 mM MO (including the insert figure) and
479
polysulfides respectively; Figure S6, GC (a) and MS (b: dimethyl disulfide, c:
480
dimethyl trisulfide and d: dimethyl tetrasulfide) spectrograms of the sample in the fast
481
degradation phase of MO decolorization with 100 mg L-1 CNTs addition; Figure S7,
482
MO degradation with different concentration of polysulfides in water (0.5 mM MO,
483
polysulfides: 62-992 μM and pH 7.2; the point were indicated the experimental data
484
while the lines were fitted by pseudo first order kinetic model); Figure S8, Effects of
485
CNTs on the MO degradation by polysulfides (a: 992 μM, b: 620 μM and c: 310 μM);
486
Figure S9, MO decolorization by sulfide with 1 mM of AQDS, 0.01 mM of
487
Coenzyme Q10, respectively (0.5 mM MO, 8 mM sulfide, and pH 7.2); Figure S10,
488
(a) Cyclic voltammogram, and (b) concentration variation of polysulfides (left 21
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489
coordinate axis) and elemental sulfur (right coordinate axis) during the MO
490
decolorization by 8 mM sulfide with the addition of 1 mM AQDS. This material is
491
available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
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Figure Captions
655 656 657
Figure 1 (a) MO degradation (left coordinate axis), polysulfide formation (right
658
coordinate axis, C = disulfide×2 + trisulfide×3), and (b) product generation
659
by sulfide in the presence and absence of CNTs (0.5 mM MO, 8 mM
660
sulfide, 100 mg L-1 CNTs if added, and pH 7.2); (c) effect of CNT dosage
661
on MO decolorization by sulfide (0.5 mM MO, 8 mM sulfide, and pH 7.2);
662
the lines were fitted by the Gompertz model; (d) MO degradation by sulfide
663
mediated with different PCM types, including 100 mg L-1 biochar, 100 mg
664
L-1 graphite, 20 mg L-1 GO, 20 mg L-1 RGO, and 20 mg L-1NG (0.5 mM
665
MO, 8 mM sulfide, and pH 7.2); the lines were fitted by the Gompertz
666
model.
667 668 669
Figure 2 MO degradation by different chemical states of sulfur (0.5 mM MO, 8 mM sulfur species, and pH 7.2).
670 671
Figure 3 Cyclic voltammograms of different solutions: (a) MO degradation by sulfide
672
without and with 100 mg L-1 of CNTs; (b) sulfide and polysulfides (8 mM);
673
(c) elemental sulfur, thiosulfate, dithionite, and sulfite (8 mM); (d) MO
674
degradation by 8 mM polysulfides.
675 676
Figure 4 Concentration variation of polysulfides (left coordinate axis, C = disulfide×2
677
+ trisulfide×3), elemental sulfur, sulfide, and total sulfur (right coordinate
678
axis): (a) MO degradation by sulfide without CNTs addition, (b) MO
679
degradation by sulfide with CNTs addition. 29
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680 681 682
Figure 5 Effect of polysulfide concentration on the pseudo-first-order kinetic rate constant of the MO degradation (0.5 mM MO and pH 7.2).
683 684 685
Figure 6 Proposed mechanism of azo dye decolorization by sulfide in the presence and absence of PCM.
686 687
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1.2 (a)
1200
No CNTs (fitted line) CNTs (fitted line) CNTs (polysulfides)
No CNTs (experiment) CNTs (experiment) No CNTs (polysulfides)
1000
1.0
Ct / C0
0.5 (b)
0.8
800
0.6
600
0.4
400
0.4
C (M-S) C (mM)
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0.3
No CNTs No CNTs CNTs CNTs
ABS DPD ABS DPD
0.2 0.1
0.2
200
0.0
0
0.0 0
20
40
60
80
0
100
20
40
t (min) 1.0
(c)
0.6 0.4
0.4
0.0
0.0 0
690
0.6
0.2
0.2
688 689
100 Control Graphite Biochar GO RGO NG
0.8
Ct / C0
Ct / C0
0.8
80
(d)
1.0
No CNTs CNTs-10mg L-1 CNTs-50mg L-1 CNTs-100mg L-1 CNTs-150mg L-1
60
t (min)
20
40
60
t (min)
80
100
120
0
20
40
60
t (min)
Figure 1
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1.0 Sulfide Polysulfides
0.8
Dithionite
Ct / C0
Elemental sulfur Thiosulfate
0.6
Sulfite Sulfate Sulfide and
0.4
1mM elemental sulfur
0.2
0.0 0 691
20
40
60
80
t (min)
692 693
Figure 2
694
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100
120
140
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0.2
(a)
(b)
0.1 0.0
I (mA)
I (mA)
Sulfide+MO with and without CNTs (0 min) 0.1 Sulfide+MO (60 min) Sulfide+CNTs+MO (10 min) 0.0
-0.1 -0.2
-0.1 -0.2
Sulfide Polysulfides
-0.3 -0.3
-0.4 -1.6
-1.4
-1.2
-1.0
-0.8
-0.6
-0.4
-0.2
0.0
-1.6
-1.4
-1.2
0.08
Thiosulfate Dithionite Sulfite Elemental sulfur
697
-0.4
-0.2
0.0
Sx-0min Sx-5min Sx-15min Sx-25min
0.08
-0.04
695 696
-0.6
(d)
0.12
0.00
-0.08
-0.8
I (mA)
I (mA)
0.16
(c)
0.04
-1.0
E (V)
E (V)
-1.6
-1.4
-1.2
-1.0
-0.8
-0.6
-0.4
-0.2
0.0
-0.8
-0.6
-0.4
E (V)
E (V)
Figure 3
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-0.2
0.0
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(a)
Sulfide+MO
8 7
Disulfide Trisulfide Elemental sulfur Sulfide Sulfur mass balance
C (M)
200
100
C (mM-S)
300
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6 5 1 0
0 0
60
80
t (min)
100
CNTs+Sulfide+MO
(b)
300
40
8
C (M)
Disulfide Trisulfide Elemental sulfur Sulfide Sulfur mass balance
200
7
C (mM-S)
400
20
6 5
100 1 0
0 0 698 699
10
20
t (min)
30
Figure 4
700 701 702
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0.04
k (min-1)
0.03
0.02
0.01
0.00
0
200
400
600
800
Polysulfides (M-S) 703 704
Figure 5
705
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1000
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706 707 708
Figure 6
709
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