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Electrochemically Catalytic Degradation of Phenol with Hydrogen Peroxide in-situ Generated and Activated by a Municipal Sludge-derived Catalyst Bao-Cheng Huang, Jun Jiang, Wei-Kang Wang, Wen-Wei Li, Feng Zhang, Hong Jiang, and Han-Qing Yu ACS Sustainable Chem. Eng., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/ acssuschemeng.8b00416 • Publication Date (Web): 19 Mar 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 21, 2018
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ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering
Electrochemically Catalytic Degradation of Phenol with Hydrogen Peroxide in-situ Generated and Activated by a Municipal Sludge-derived Catalyst
Bao-Cheng Huang†, Jun Jiang†, Wei-Kang Wang, Wen-Wei Li, Feng Zhang, Hong Jiang, Han-Qing Yu* CAS Key Laboratory of Urban Pollutant Conversion, Department of Chemistry, University of Science & Technology of China, No. 96, Jinzhai Road, Baohe District, Hefei 230026, P. R. China
†
These authors contributed equally to this work.
*Corresponding Author: Prof. Han-Qing Yu, Fax: +86-551-63601592. E-mail:
[email protected] 1
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ABSTRACT
2
With the rapid global urbanization, today’s cities are facing an increasing pressure
3
for the treatment of both domestic and industrial wastewaters. In this work, a
4
proof-of-concept of “treating industrial wastewater using the sludge originating from
5
domestic wastewater treatment for urban pollution control” was proposed. After
6
one-step pyrolysis of the excess sludge from domestic wastewater treatment, a
7
metal-carbon composite catalyst with a high H2O2-producting capacity (432 mg/h/g)
8
was successfully synthesized. By applying the prepared material as a cathode catalyst
9
in an electro-Fenton system, phenol (40 mg/L), a model pollutant in industrial
10
wastewaters, was completely degraded within 40 min at a potential of 0.15-0.35 V (vs.
11
reversible
12
approximately 60% of total organic carbon was efficiently removed by the
13
electro-Fenton system within 4 h at 0.25 V, and the hydroxyl radicals were found to be
14
the main oxidation agent for the phenol degradation. More importantly, the phenol
15
removal efficiency remained at a high level (87%) and the released iron was low (0.8
16
mg/L) even after 10 cycles of reuse. Thus, an efficient and cost-effective integrated
17
system for the treatment of both domestic and industrial wastewaters was successfully
18
developed and validated. The results from this work are useful to establish a new
19
sustainable pollution control scenario.
hydrogen
electrode)
without
dosing
external
iron.
Meanwhile,
20 21
Keywords: Catalyst; electro-Fenton; H2O2 production; municipal sludge; pollutant
22
degradation
23
2
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INTRODUCTION
25 26
A large amount of municipal wastewater, i.e., domestic and industrial wastewaters, is
27
increasingly produced in today’s urban cities. Taking China as an example,
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approximately 73.5 billion m3 wastewater was produced in 2015,1 which places
29
tremendous pressure on the environment and calls for efficient and cost-effective
30
municipal wastewater pollutant control approaches. Electro-Fenton (EF) process, in
31
which H2O2 can be continually generated on cathode via a two-electron oxygen
32
reduction reaction (ORR), has recently received great interests because of its
33
numerous merits.2-4 The efficiency of the EF for pollutant degradation depends
34
heavily on the generation rate and cumulative concentration of H2O2.5,6 Among the
35
studied
36
H2O2-generating electrocatalyst due to its nontoxic, high overpotential for H2
37
evolution and good stability.2 Up to date now graphite felt,7 carbon sponge,8 and
38
activated carbon fiber9 have been widely tested for their feasibilities of using as
39
cathode catalysts. However, the catalytic activity of ORR by pure carbon materials is
40
low.10 Thus, doping of heteroatoms such as nitrogen and sulfur10,11 and synthesis of
41
metal-carbon composites6,12 have also been used to improve the catalytic performance.
42
Nevertheless, the fabrication of a composite H2O2-generating electrocatalyst is a
43
multi-step process and external chemical reagents are generally required, which often
44
makes it environmentally unfriendly. Thus, green synthesis of electrochemical
45
catalysts with high H2O2-generating capacity at a low cost is crucial to facilitate the
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practical application of EF for wastewater treatment.
cathodes,
carbonaceous
material
is
recognized
3
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In fact, domestic sewage is embodied with a high content of organics and such an
48
organic complex could be used as low-cost precursor to synthesize electro catalysts
49
for H2O2 generation after appropriate treatment. Previous studies have shown that
50
sewage sludge, which is formed during wastewater treatment, could exhibit an
51
electrochemical activity for 4-e- ORR via pyrolysis.13,14 However, how to separate and
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obtain organic precursor from domestic wastewater in a cost-effective way is
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challenging. Coincidently, iron-based coagulant is widely used for capturing organic
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carbon in domestic wastewater treatment process and its application is found to be
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essential in upcoming wastewater treatment plants.15 Fe-enriched sludge would be
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produced accordingly from domestic wastewater treatment process with a pursuit of
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utmost recovery of energy and resource.16 Therefore, it is hypothesized that the
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metal-carbon composite (MCC) originating from the domestic wastewater treatment
59
process exhibits an ORR activity to produce H2O2 after appropriate treatment.
60
Furthermore, the produced H2O2 could be in-situ activated by MCC to degrade
61
industrial pollutants. Thus, a new sustainable scenario for the treatment of both
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domestic and industrial wastewaters can be developed. In such a scenario, the sludge
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originating from the coagulation treatment of domestic wastewater is reused as
64
electro-catalysts in an EF system to further treat industrial wastewaters.
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Therefore, to demonstrate the above concept, a composition-directed pyrolysis
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strategy was designed to prepare the MCC with a high electrochemical activity. The
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impact of doping Fe and N, which are the two elements found to be effective in
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improving electrochemical activity of the material,11,17 on the H2O2 production 4
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performance by MCC was explored. Also, an MCC-based EF system was established
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and its applied potential, mineralization efficiency, degradation kinetics, and cycling
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use stability for the degradation of phenol, a model pollutant in industrial wastewaters,
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were evaluated. Furthermore, the mechanism for the phenol degradation in the EF
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system was elucidated. In this way, an alternative sludge waste reuse approach was
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proposed and an efficient EF system to degrade phenol was developed. Moreover, a
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concept “treating industrial wastewater using the sludge originating from domestic
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wastewater treatment for urban pollution control” could be architected.
77 78
MATERIALS AND METHODS
79 80
Chemicals. Analytical grade phenol, sodium sulfate, iron (III) chloride (FeCl3•6H2O)
81
were purchased from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., China. Nafion 117 Proton
82
exchange membrane was purchased from DuPont Co., USA. Nafion solution and
83
5,5-dimethylpyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) were obtained from Sigma Co., USA.
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Carbon papers (Toray Co., Japan) used in this study were sequentially rinsed with
85
acetone, HCl (1 M), and ethanol for grease and other impurities removal. Milli-Q
86
water was used to remove the residual chemicals from each rinsing step.
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MCC Preparation and Cathode Fabrication. MCC was obtained by
88
carbonation of the coagulated sludge under a NH3/Ar atmosphere (V%=1:9) (Fig. S1).
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In brief, domestic wastewater after grit settling pretreatment was taken from the
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Wangtang Wastewater Treatment Plant (Hefei, China). FeCl3•6H2O of 0.5 mM was 5
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added to the wastewater, followed by 130-rpm rapid agitation for 3 min and 40-rpm
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slow agitation for 25 min. Then, the precipitates were freeze-dried for 24 h to obtain
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the precursor. Afterwards, MCCs were prepared by carbonization of the precursor at
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800 °C for 4 h (MCC800-4), 6 h (MCC800-6), and 8 h (MCC800-8) under a NH3/Ar
95
atmosphere (detailed information in SI). Moreover, the MCCs at the other two
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carbonization temperatures, 600 °C (MCC600-6) and 1000 °C (MCC1000-6), were
97
additionally prepared. All of the prepared MCCs were immersed in 1 M HCl solution
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three times to remove soluble ash, washed with milli-Q water to pH=7.0, and then
99
dried at 105 °C overnight. As a comparison, the precursor was also annealed under Ar
100
for 6 h, and the resulting product was named as MCC800-6Ar. In addition, the
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precursor with HCl pre-rinsing was carbonized under NH3 and named as MCCH800-6.
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The main preparation conditions and the characteristics of the different catalysts are
103
summarized in Table S1.
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To prepare an MCC cathode, 10 mg of MCC was mixed with 0.5 ml of 75%
105
isopropanol and 10 µL of a Nafion solution. Then, the mixture was sonicated for 30
106
min and dropped onto a 3×3 cm carbon paper. The MCC electrode was obtained after
107
fully drying at room temperature (25 °C).
108
Electrochemical Experiment Setup. All of the electrochemical experiments
109
were conducted on a CHI 760E potentiostat (Chenhua Instrument Co., China) via the
110
potentiostatic method. The potentials reported in this study were referenced to the
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reversible hydrogen electrode (EVS RHE) according to the following equation: EVS RHE=EVS Ag/AgCl+Eθ Ag/AgCl+0.059pH
(1) 6
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where EVS Ag/AgCl (V) is the applied potential referenced to the saturated Ag/AgCl
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electrode, Eθ Ag/AgCl (V) is the potential of Ag/AgCl under the standard conditions.
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The H2O2 generation performance via ORR was firstly evaluated in a
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two-compartment cell with a Nafion 117 membrane as separator. Pt wire and Ag/AgCl
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(in 3.0 M KCl) were respectively used as the counter and reference electrodes. Both
117
the anode and cathode cells were filled with 75 ml of electrolyte (0.05 M H2SO4 +
118
0.05 M Na2SO4, pH=1.0), and oxygen was continuously flushed with a flowrate of 50
119
ml/min.
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The ORR activity was measured with a rotating ring-disk electrode (5.5 mm
121
diameter; Pine Research Instrumentation, Inc., USA) using a three-electrode mode. To
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prepare the working electrode, MCC was dispersed on the 75% isopropanol solution
123
with a final concentration of 10 g/L. Nafion solution with 2% content was supplied to
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the above dispersion and sonication was then applied to form a homogeneous ink.
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Then, 10 µL of ink was loaded onto a rotating ring-disk electrode and dried at room
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temperature. Linear sweep voltammograms (LSV) were tested by sweeping the
127
potential from 0.8 to -0.1 V (vs. RHE) at a rate of 5 mV/s with a rotating speed of
128
1600 rpm. To detect H2O2, the ring potential was kept constant at 1.2 V, and the H2O2
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selectivity (H2O2%) was calculated as follows:17
ܪଶ ܱଶ % =
200݅ ݅ + ܰ݅ௗ
(2)
130
where ir and id are the ring current and disk current, respectively, and N is the current
131
collection efficiency of the Pt ring in the rotating ring-disk electrode (N=0.4). The
132
electrochemical impedance spectroscopy measurements were conducted at a potential 7
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of 0.25 V with a frequency ranging from 100 kHz to 0.1 Hz and an amplitude of 10
134
mV.
135
In order to examine the feasibility of MCC for the treatment of industrial
136
wastewater, the EF system was established to degrade phenol as a representative
137
organic pollutant. The degradation of phenol (40 mg/L) was conducted in a single
138
compartment cell with the MCC electrode as the working electrode and Pt wire as the
139
counter electrode. Phenol was dissolved in 0.1 M Na2SO4, and the pH was adjusted to
140
3.0 with 0.1 M H2SO4. A constant potential of 0.05~0.45 V was applied to the
141
working electrode in the EF system. Moreover, an electrochemical cell with an open
142
circuit was used to eliminate the adsorption impact. As a comparison, O2 was replaced
143
with N2 to exclude electrical oxidation. In the EF degradation process, methanol (20%,
144
v/v) was used as a quenching agent to determine the radical species.
145 146
The mineralization current efficiency (MCE, %) at a given time was calculated as follows to evaluate the current utilization efficiency of the EF system:2 MCE=[△(TOC)tnFV/(4.32×107mIt)]×100
(3)
147
where △(TOC)t is the TOC decay (mg C/L), F is faraday constant (96485 C/mol), n is
148
the number of electrons exchanged, V is the electrolyte volume (L), m is the number
149
of the carbon atoms of the pollutants, I is the applied current (A), t is the electrolysis
150
time (h), and 4.32×107 is the conversion factor for units homogenization (= 3600
151
s/h×12000 mg C/mol).
152
Analysis. The H2O2 concentration was measured using a colorimetric method.18
153
Phenol was detected by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC, 1260 8
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Infinity, Agilent, Inc., USA) with 50% methanol as the mobile phase. Samples were
155
taken at set intervals and mixed with methanol immediately to stop the reaction.
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However, in order to avoid the interference of methanol to the total organic carbon
157
(TOC) detection, sodium nitrite was dosed to terminate the reaction. TOC was
158
detected with a TOC analyzer (Muti N/C 2100, Analytik AG, Germany). The product
159
morphology was observed with a field emission scanning electron microscopy (SEM,
160
Zeiss Co., Germany). The chemical compositions and valences of the elements on the
161
MCC surface were analyzed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS,
162
EXCALAB250, Thermo Fisher, Inc., USA). The surface areas of the samples were
163
measured by the Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) method with a Builder 4200
164
instrument (Tristar II 3020 M, Micromeritics Co., USA). Raman spectra were excited
165
by radiation at 514.5 nm from a confocal laser micro-Raman spectrometer
166
(LABRAM-HR, Jobin-Yvon Co., France). The radicals formed in the EF process were
167
examined by electron spin resonance (ESR, JES-FA200, JEOL Co., Japan). Before the
168
ESR detection, DMPO was immediately mixed with the sample to form DMPO-•OH.
169
The metal element was detected by atomic absorption spectroscopy (AA800, Perkin
170
Elmer Co., USA).
171 172
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
173 174
Optimized H2O2 Production with MCC. The cumulative H2O2 concentration is vital
175
to the overall EF performance, thus, the MCC preparation conditions were optimized 9
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to improve the H2O2 yields. It was found that the H2O2 concentration increased almost
177
linearly over time, and the highest H2O2 concentration (116 mg/L) was achieved by
178
MCC800-6 after 120-min electrolysis (Fig. 1a). Further increase in pyrolysis
179
temperature or prolonging the carbonation time would cause the deterioration of
180
catalytic activity. The average H2O2 production efficiency of the MCC reached 432
181
mg/h/g, which is superior to most of the other carbon-based non-noble metal
182
electrocatalysts under similar conditions (Table S2). Since the material obtained at
183
800 °C for 6 h exhibited the best performance, such a carbonation condition was
184
selected to further prepare MCC800-6Ar and MCCH800-6 to investigate the pyrolysis
185
atmosphere and precursor composition influences.
186
The electro-catalytic H2O2-producing abilities of MCC800-6, MCC800-6Ar, and
187
MCCH800-6 were further evaluated. It was observed that Ar gas atmosphere
188
pyrolysis strategy could greatly prevent the 2 e- oxygen reduction and no obvious
189
H2O2 accumulated for the obtained product (Fig. 1b). In comparison, acid pickling of
190
the precursor reduced the H2O2 level with accumulation concentration of 58 mg/L
191
after 120-min electrolysis, which was only half of that for the MCC800-6. A
192
comparison of the XRD patterns and SEM images between the three MCCs shows
193
that no obvious differences were observed (Fig. S2 and S3), implying that the
194
material’s morphology is not the key factor governing the performance.
195
Electrochemical Properties of MCC. The electrochemical properties of MCC
196
were further investigated by rotating ring-disk electrode measurements. Carbonization
197
under Ar gas atmosphere greatly decreased the electrochemical activity, as both the 10
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ring and disk currents were the lowest among the three studied materials (Fig. 2a).
199
Although the calculated H2O2 selectivity of MCC800-Ar was close to 100%, the high
200
impedance resulted in a low current intensity (Fig. 2b and 2c), which further inhibited
201
the oxygen reduction and induced the decline of H2O2 accumulation level. In
202
comparison, the precursor with acid pretreatment changed the primary ORR on the
203
surface from 2 e- to 4 e-, as evidenced by the decline of selectivity (10-18%) for H2O2
204
production at 0.2-0.4 V.
205
To further understand the electro-activity of the materials, the Raman spectrum of
206
the as-obtained MCC was recorded (Fig. 3a). The obtained materials showed two
207
main Raman peaks at ~1360 cm-1 (D band) and 1600 cm-1 (G band). D bands are
208
known to be characteristic of disordered graphite with structural defects, while the G
209
band is associated with graphitic carbon and the D/G band intensity ratio (ID/IG) is
210
commonly used to characterize the graphited degree (the degree of graphitization) of
211
carbonaceous materials.19,20 In the current case, the ID/IG of MCC800-6 (0.89) was
212
clearly lower than those of MCC800-6Ar (1.02) and MCCH800-6 (0.98), which
213
indicates a higher graphitization degree and results in better electrical conductivity.
214
XPS analysis was further performed to explore the differences in the electronic
215
structure and surface chemical composition among the three materials. The signals of
216
C, N, O, and Fe were clearly observed on the MCC800-6 (Fig. 3b). Interestingly, the
217
N1s signal vanished on MCC800-6Ar, implying that a NH3 atmosphere is essential for
218
N doping. The high-resolution N 1s spectra of the MCC800-6 and MCCH800-6
219
catalysts suggest that pyridinic N, pyrrolic N, graphitic N, and quaternary N21,22 11
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existed (Fig. S4). It has been widely reported that pyridinic N and pyrrolic N can form
221
Fe-Nx moieties with Fe due to their long-pair electrons,17,23 and the graphitic N
222
combined with Fe-Nx moieties was the efficient active sites for ORR.17,24 For
223
comparison, since the N content of the MCC800-Ar was quite low (0.3 %, Table S3),
224
the lack of ORR sites resulted in a negligible H2O2 accumulation. Although the N
225
content of MCCH800-6 was comparable to that of MCC800-6, the low Fe content
226
(Fig. 3b) might reduce the activity and induce a reduction in the H2O2 level due to the
227
less Fe-Nx active sites. Therefore, N and Fe might play an important role in the
228
electrosynthesis of H2O2.
229
Phenol Degradation by MCC in EF. To examine the application potential of the
230
prepared MCC catalysts, phenol degradation by these catalysts in EF was investigated.
231
It was found that the phenol was efficiently removed within 40 min in EF system by
232
loading MCC as cathode catalyst and no external supply of iron was required (Fig. 4a).
233
Moreover, the contribution of the pure carbon paper, which was not coated with
234
catalyst, to the overall phenol degradation was low. The phenol degradation kinetics
235
in the EF with the MCC electrode was further analyzed. Although the initial
236
degradation rate was slow, which might be due to the insufficient accumulation of
237
H2O2, the overall phenol degradation was found to follow the pseudo-first order (Fig.
238
S5). The apparent rate constant (k) for the system with the carbon paper was only
239
0.001 min-1. The degradation rate was greatly improved with an increase in k to 0.078
240
min-1 when MCC was used as the working electrode.
241
To optimize the phenol removal performance of the system, the impacts of 12
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several operational parameters on the system were investigated. Since the potential
243
applied to the cathode affected the H2O2 accumulation level, the impact of the
244
potential on the phenol removal without the addition of iron was initially explored.
245
The phenol concentration rapidly declined within 40 min when the potential was
246
increased from 0.15 V to 0.35 V (Fig. 4b). However, a lower (0.015 V) or higher
247
potential (0.45 V) resulted in a poorer performance. A lower potential might further
248
reduce H2O2 to H2O and 4 e- ORR process became predominated. The TOC removal
249
efficiency increased continuously over time for each investigated potential (Fig. 4c).
250
With the same tendency as the phenol removal efficiency, the highest TOC removal
251
efficiency was achieved at 0.25 V. Approximately 60% of TOC was removed after 4-h
252
electrolysis at 0.25 V. Such results imply a high efficiency of the EF system. In
253
addition to the applied potential, pH is another crucial factor to greatly affect overall
254
Fenton reaction performance. In this work, the phenol removal performances of the
255
EF system at raised pHs were further investigated. Phenol was found to be completely
256
removed at pH 4.0, while only 30% removal efficiency was achieved by raising the
257
pH to 5.0 (Fig. S6a). The poor performance at pH 5.0 might be due to the low H2O2
258
concentration (Fig. S6b). As discussed above, Fe might play a key role in catalyst’s
259
activity. Hence, FeCl3•6H2O at reduced concentrations (0.2 mM and nil) was dosed in
260
the coagulation process to explore the impact of Fe content on MCC’s performance. It
261
was observed that by reducing the Fe dosage to 0.2 mM, only 20% of phenol could be
262
removed within 60-min (Fig. S7a). If the domestic wastewater precipitate was directly
263
used as a precursor to carbonize without dose of Fe, the obtained product showed no 13
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H2O2 producing ability (Fig. S7b). The above results again proved that Fe was
265
essential to achieve a high performance of H2O2 synthesis for MCC.
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To exclude the influences of anode oxidation and cathode material adsorption,
267
electrical oxidation (aeration N2 to inhibit the H2O2 generation) and electrode
268
adsorption (with open-circuit) experiments were conducted as references at 0.25 V. As
269
shown in Fig. 5d, 97% phenol was degraded in the EF system after 40-min treatment.
270
In comparison, only 6% phenol was adsorbed by the electrode and 12% was removed
271
via electric oxidation. These results clearly demonstrate that H2O2 was in-situ
272
electro-synthesized and activated by the MCC electrode effectively to mineralize
273
phenol.
274
In the Fenton reaction, intermediate free radical formation via H2O2 activation is
275
the key step to achieve effective pollutant degradation. Thus, the presence of hydroxyl
276
radicals in the EF was verified using the DMPO spin-trapping method. Fig. 5a shows
277
the typical ESR spectrum obtained after a 30-min reaction. A spectrum consisting of
278
quartet-lines with a peak height ratio of 1:2:2:1 was clearly observed. Such an ESR
279
spectrum is characterized as a hydroxyl radical.25 Moreover, methanol was used as the
280
radical scavenger to quench the hydroxyl radicals. The results indicate that phenol
281
degradation was greatly inhibited by the dose of methanol (Fig. 5b). Therefore, the
282
hydroxyl radicals formed in the EF system was the main reactive species to
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mineralize phenol.
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From an economic perspective, the cycling reuse stability is another issue for the
285
practical application of catalysts. In our work, the recycling capability of the catalysts 14
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was evaluated by using a reused MCC electrode in the EF system. The MCC
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electrode could achieve a high phenol removal efficiency (91%) after 7 repeated uses
288
(Fig. 5c). The phenol removal was slightly reduced to 87% even after 10 cycles. Since
289
the MCC contained iron, its release into the solution needs to be evaluated. Although
290
the released iron concentration in solution was slightly high after the third cycle (4
291
mg/L), this value was below 1 mg/L after seven-cycle use. H2O2 may be activated by
292
the released Fe for phenol degradation. As a result, H2O2 with a cumulative
293
concentration (135 mg/L) was mixed with ferrous iron at the released concentration
294
level for phenol degradation by the conventional Fenton reaction. It was observed that
295
4 mg/L iron resulted in excellent phenol removal (Fig. 5d). Reduction in iron dose to
296
1.9 mg/L decreased the degradation efficiency to 76%. When the iron dose was
297
continually reduced to 0.8 mg/L, the overall phenol removal sharply declined to 10%
298
within 60 min. However, the above experimental result shows that 87% of phenol was
299
removed by EF in the tenth cycle. Such a comparison indicates that MCC might be
300
able to activate the generated H2O2 in-situ, resulting in a better pollutant removal
301
performance compared to the conventional Fenton process.
302
The morphology and structure of reused material were further examined to prove
303
its stability. The SEM images indicate that the morphology of material remained
304
unchanged after recycling use (Fig. S8). In addition, the pyridinic N, pyrrolic N,
305
graphitic N, and quaternary N were observed in the XPS spectra (Fig. S9a). By
306
comparing to the pristine material, additional C-F structure (292 eV) was observed at
307
the reused catalyst’s surface (Fig. S9b), which is ascribed to the added Nafion 15
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substance. In all, both the morphology and chemical composition of the catalysts were
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proven to be stable.
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Other Pollutants Degradation in MCC Fabricated EF System. In addition to
311
phenol, the feasibility of the EF system on other industrial wastewater treatment
312
would of great importance to the proposed concept. As a result, the degradation of
313
various typical refractory pollutants, e.g., dye (rhodamine B), pesticide (atrazine), and
314
bisphenol-A by the fabricated EF system was evaluated. All of these three types of
315
pollutants were efficiently removed within 40 min at 0.25 V applied potential (Fig. 6).
316
These results further validate the universality of our proposed strategy. Although the
317
domestic wastewater quality is site-specific and the activity of the obtained MCC
318
might vary, the high activity of the material can be achieved by post chemical
319
modifications.
320
One of the major concerns for EF degradation of pollutants is the electric energy
321
consumption. Here, the mineralization current efficiency of EF system for phenol
322
degradation was only 5.9%, which is low. However, the current density (1.67 mA/cm2)
323
is much lower than those reported in other studies (10-30 mA/cm2).26,27 In this work,
324
only two factors, i.e., carbonation atmosphere and pyrolysis time, which affect the
325
product performance, were taken into account. Considering that the BET surface area
326
of the material (89 m2/g) was low (Fig. S10), other strategies such as tailoring pore
327
structure and tuning surface hydrophilicity,28 could be adopted to further improve the
328
MCC performance and current efficiency.
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CONCLUSIONS
331 332
In this work, a green waste pollution control strategy for urban cities’ sustainable
333
development, i.e., treating industrial wastewater with the sludge originating from
334
domestic wastewater treatment process was proposed. After one-step pyrolysis of
335
excess sludge formed in the domestic wastewater treatment process, an efficient H2O2
336
electrochemical synthesis material was successfully fabricated. Electrochemical tests
337
revealed that the obtained MCC was able to catalyze O2 reduction to H2O2 with an
338
accumulation rate of 432 mg/h/g under acidic condition. Benefitting from its high
339
activity and selectivity for H2O2 production, the MCC-fabricated EF system was
340
efficient in complete removal of 40 mg/L phenol within 40 min at a potential of
341
0.15-0.35 V without the need of dosing external iron. The hydroxyl radicals were
342
found to be the main reactive species and approximate 60% of total organic carbon
343
removal efficiency was achieved within 4 h at 0.25 V. This work shows a great
344
potential of such an integrated approach for efficient and cost-effectively urban water
345
pollution control. Further optimization of the MCC material and operation system
346
could also improve its performance.
347 348
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
349
We thank the National Natural Science Foundation of China (51538011), the
350
Collaborative Innovation Center of Suzhou Nano Science and Technology of the
351
Ministry of Education of China, and the Anhui S&T Key Project (1501041118) for the 17
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support of this work.
353 354
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
355
Supporting Information Available. The detail description of pyrolysis
356
procedure; comparison of catalytic activities of various catalysts; elemental analysis
357
of the precursor and MCC800-6; MCC preparation process; XRD patterns; SEM
358
images; XPS spectra of C1s, Fe 2p, and N1s; kinetic analysis of the phenol
359
degradation; impacts of pH and Fe content on phenol degradation and BET surface
360
area results are available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org/.
361 362
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Figure Captions Figure 1. Optimization of the MCC fabrication for the improved H2O2 generation performance. Impacts of pyrolysis temperature and time on cumulative H2O2 production by MCCs (a). Comparison of carbonation atmosphere and acid pickling pretreatment of precursor for H2O2 production (b). The applied potential was 0.25 V and the experiment was conducted in triple trials (n=3). Figure 2. Electrochemical performance of the as-prepared catalyst. Rotating ring-disk electrode measurements (a) show the oxygen reduction currents. The calculated H2O2 selectivity (b) at different potentials and EIS analysis (c) of MCCs under different carbonation atmospheres. Figure 3. Raman spectra (a) and XPS surveys (b) of MCCs obtained under different conditions. Figure 4. Phenol degradation performance by the loading MCC as cathode catalyst in an EF system. Phenol removal in the EF system with MCC as working electrode at 0.25 V (a). The impacts of applied cathode potential on phenol degradation (b) and TOC removal efficiency (c) in the EF system without the external assistant of iron. Phenol removal efficiency over time for the EF, electrode adsorption, and electrical oxidation at 0.25 V condition (d). Figure 5. Reactive species responsible for phenol degradation in EF system and the cycling reuse stability of MCC. ESR spectrum of the DMPO-trapped hydroxyl radical after 30-min reaction (a), phenol removal as a function of time by using methanol as radical scavenger (b), phenol degradation in different batch runs in the EF system (c) and conventional Fenton system by dosing with 135 mg/L H2O2 (d). Figure 6. Performance of the MCC-based EF system for the degradation of other pollutants. Inert is the color change of rhodamine B after EF treatment.
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H2O2 concentration (mg/L)
a
MCC800-4 MCC800-6 MCC800-8 MCC600-6 MCC1000-6 C paper
120 100 80 60 40 20 0 0
b H2O2 concentration (mg/L)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
20
40
60
80
100
120
100
120
Time (min) 120
MCC800-6 MCC800-6Ar MCCH800-6
100 80 60 40 20 0 0
20
40
60
80
Time (min)
Figure 1
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a
0.06
Current (mA)
0.04 0.02
Ring
0.00 0.0 -0.2 Disk -0.4 MCC800-6 MCC800-6Ar MCCH800-6
-0.6 -0.8 -1.0 0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
Potential vs. RHE (V)
b
MCC800-6
H2O2 selectivity (%)
100
MCC800-6Ar
MCCH800-6
80 60 40 20 0
0.2
0.3
0.4
Potential vs. RHE (V)
c
MCC800-6 MCC800-6Ar
1600
-Z'' (ohm)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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1200 800 400 0 0
2000
4000
6000
Z' (ohm)
Figure 2
25
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8000
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a
1.0
1.03
d b
0.98
0.89
O 1s
D band G band
0.4 0.2 MCC800-6
MCC800-6Ar MCCH800-6
MCCH800-6
MCC800-6Ar
MCC800-6Ar MCC800-6 500
750
MCCH800-6
N 1s
Intensity (a.u.)
ID /I G
0.6
0.0
Fe 2p
C 1s
0.8
Intensity (a.u.)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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MCC800-6
1000
1250
1500
1750
0
200
-1
400
600
800
Binding energy (eV)
Raman shift (cm )
Figure 3
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a
b
1.0
0.6
C paper MCC
0.4 0.2
0.6 0.4 0.2
0.0
0.0
0
10
0.05 V 0.15 V 0.25 V
60 50
20
30
40
50
60
0
Time (min) 0.35 V 0.45 V
d
10
20
30
40
50
60
Time (min) 1.0 0.8
40
C/C 0
c
0.25 V 0.35 V 0.45 V
0.05 V 0.15 V
1.0 0.8
C/C 0
C/C 0
0.8
TOC removal efficiency (%)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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Electrode adsorption Electrical oxidation Electrical Fenton
0.6 0.4
20 0.2
10
0.0
0 1
2
3
0
4
10
20
30
40
Time (min)
Time (h)
Figure 4
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50
60
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a
b 0 min
1.0
C/C0
Intensity
0.8
30 min
0.6 0.4 0.2
320
322
324
326
0.0
328
0
10
20
Magnetic intensity (mT) Cycle 3
1.0
Cycle 5
Cycle 10
d
4
3
0.6 2 0.4 1 0.2 0
0.0 30
60
90
40
50
60
Relased Fe concentration Cycle 7
0.8
0
30
Time (min)
Leaching Fe (mg/L) C/C0
Phenol concentration
c
C/C0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 4.0 mg/L Fe 1.9 mg/L Fe 1.0 mg/L Fe 0.8 mg/L Fe
0.2 0.0
120 150 180 210 240
0
30
60
Time (min)
90
120 150 180 210 240
Time (min)
Figure 5
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Figure 6
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For Table of Contents Use Only
Electro-Fenton cathode catalyst has been synthesized by using sludge originating from domestic wastewater treatment in a green way and applied for the industrial pollution control.
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