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Modeling the Kinetics of Contaminants Oxidation and the Generation of Manganese(III) in the Permanganate/Bisulfite Process Bo Sun, Hongyu Dong, Di He, Dandan Rao, and Xiaohong Guan Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b05207 • Publication Date (Web): 28 Dec 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 30, 2015
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Modeling the Kinetics of Contaminants Oxidation and the Generation of Manganese(III) in the Permanganate/Bisulfite Process Bo Sun1,2, Hongyu Dong1, Di He3, Dandan Rao1, Xiaohong Guan1,4* 1
State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resources Reuse, Tongji University, Shanghai 20092, P. R. China
2
State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150090, P. R. China
3
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia 4
Key Laboratory of Yangtze River Water Environment, Ministry of Education,
College of Environment Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, China
*Contact/Corresponding author contact information: Email:
[email protected] (X.H. Guan); Phone: +86-21-65980956.
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ABSTRACT:
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Permanganate can be activated by bisulfite to generate soluble Mn(III)
3
(non-complexed with ligands other than H2O and OH−) which oxidizes organic
4
contaminants at extraordinarily high rates. However, the generation of Mn(III) in the
5
permanganate/bisulfite (PM/BS) process and the reactivity of Mn(III) toward
6
emerging contaminants have never been quantified. In this work, Mn(III) generated in
7
the PM/BS process was shown to absorb at 230-290 nm for the first time and
8
disproportionated more easily at higher pH and thus the utilization rate of Mn(III) for
9
decomposing organic contaminant was low under alkaline conditions. A Mn(III)
10
generation and utilization model was developed to get the second-order reaction rate
11
parameters of benzene oxidation by soluble Mn(III) and then benzene was chosen as
12
the reference probe to build a competition kinetics method, which was employed to
13
obtain the second-order rate constants of organic contaminants oxidation by soluble
14
Mn(III). The results revealed that the second-order rate constants of aniline and
15
bisphenol A oxidation by soluble Mn(III) were in the range of 105-106 M-1s-1. With the
16
presence of soluble Mn(III) at micromolar concentration, contaminants could be
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oxidized with observed rate several orders of magnitude higher than those by common
18
oxidation processes, implying the great potential application of the PM/BS process in
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water and wastewater treatment.
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INTRODUCTION
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In recent years, there has been growing concern on the occurrence of emerging
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contaminants in the aquatic environment.1 Many emerging contaminants, such as
23
pharmaceuticals, personal care products and hormones, persist at least partially during
24
conventional wastewater treatment and were detected in secondary effluents and
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receiving surface waters worldwide.2-4 Therefore, oxidation processes are widely
26
applied in water treatment for the purpose of ensuring the safety of drinking water and
27
in wastewater treatment to minimize the discharge of emerging contaminants to the
28
receiving waters.5-8 Chemical oxidants, such as chlorine,9,
29
ozone,6, 13, 14 permanganate,15-19 and hydroxyl radicals (HO•),20,21 have been widely
30
applied for the transformation/elimination of undesired emerging contaminants from
31
wastewater and drinking water in pilot scale while ferrate,22,23 and sulfate radicals
32
(SO4•-)24-27 have been mainly investigated in lab scale for eliminating organic
33
contaminants.28 The transformation efficiency mainly depends on the reactivity of the
34
oxidant to target contaminants and to the matrix components of water such as
35
dissolved organic matter (DOM).28
10
chlorine dioxide,11, 12
36
Over the past two decades, numerous studies have been carried out to evaluate
37
the reactivity of the above-mentioned oxidants toward various emerging contaminants
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by employing rate laws and rate constants.28,
39
(non-complexed with ligands other than H2O and OH−) is known to be a strong
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one-electron oxidizing agent,30 very few studies have employed soluble Mn(III) as
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Although soluble Mn(III)
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active oxidant to achieve rapid transformation of emerging contaminants. Due to its
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tetragonally distorted electron configuration, Mn(III) is labile and susceptible to
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disproportionate to Mn(II) and Mn(IV).31 As such, up to now, most of the studies on
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transformation or sequestration of contaminants by Mn(III) were performed with
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long-lived Mn(III) species, including Mn(III)-rich MnO2,32, 33 an abundant naturally
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occurring Mn(III/IV) oxide, and soluble Mn(III) complexes.34, 35 Until fairly recently,
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our group became the first to report that soluble aquo and/or hydroxo Mn(III) (i.e.
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non-complexed with ligands other than H2O and OH−) could be generated in the
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process of permanganate reduction by bisulfite, serving as an strong oxidant for
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extremely rapid degradation of organic contaminants.36 However, the generation of
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Mn(III) in permanganate/bisulfite (PM/BS) process and the reactivity of Mn(III)
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toward emerging contaminants have never been quantified. Moreover, it is difficult to
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quantify the generated Mn(III) experimentally due to the instability of hydrolyzed
54
Mn(III).
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Competition kinetics method has been well developed for quantification of the
56
unknown rate constants.37 By comparing to the available rate constant of the reference
57
probe toward the oxidant applied, the rate constant of the target compound can be
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calculated. Song et al. proposed a stopped-flow spectrophotometric competition
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kinetics method to determine the oxidation rate constants of selected contaminants
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based on that of a reference probe by detecting the suppression of selected
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contaminants on the generation of product from reference probe.37 To employ this 4
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method to obtain the rate constants for the reactions of selected contaminants with
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Mn(III), a proper reference probe should be selected and a kinetic model should be
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first derived to estimate the second-order reaction rate parameters between this
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reference compound and Mn(III). It was found that benzene, which could not be
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oxidized by permanganate even at high-temperature,29 could be rapidly transformed to
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phenol in the PM/BS process. The generated phenol could be easily detected at
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λEx/λEm = 272 nm/298 nm with a fluorimeter equipped on the stopped flow
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spectrometer (SFS), which was negligibly interfered by the presence of other reactants
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and products in the PM/BS process. Consequently, benzene was chosen as the
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reference probe to build the competition kinetics method.
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Although some evidences for the contribution of soluble Mn(III) to the rapid
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oxidation of organic contaminants in the PM/BS process have been provided in our
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previous study, the properties of soluble Mn(III) and the concentration of Mn(III)
75
were kept unknown. In the present study, more evidences on the generation and
76
consumption of Mn(III) were provided so as to lay the foundation for constructing a
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model to identify the second-order rate constants of test compounds toward Mn(III). A
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kinetic model, in which the generation and utilization of Mn(III) was assumed to be
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key determinants of oxidation of benzene, was developed to determine the rate
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parameters for the reaction between Mn(III) and benzene. By using benzene as a
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reference probe, the second-order rate constants for the reaction of emerging
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contaminants using aniline and bisphenol A (BPA) as model compounds with Mn(III) 5
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were indirectly determined based on competition kinetics method.
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EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
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Materials. Potassium permanganate (GR grade), phenol (99% pure) and sodium
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thiosulfate pentahydrate (GR grade) were purchased from the Tianjin Chemical
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Reagent Co., Ltd. (Tianjin, China). Sodium bisulfite (AR grade) and benzene (AR
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grade) were obtained from Chinasun Specialty Products Co., Ltd. (Jiangsu, China).
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BPA (96% pure) and aniline (99% pure) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St.
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Louis, MO, USA) and methanol (99.9% pure) was supplied by Merck KgaA
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(Germany). All chemicals were used as received. Crystals of KMnO4 were dissolved
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in Milli-Q water to prepare a 50 mM stock solution. The stock solution of NaHSO3
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(250 mM) was freshly prepared for each set of experiments to avoid oxidation by
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oxygen. The stock solutions of BPA (1.0 mM), aniline (5 mM), sodium thiosulfate
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pentahydrate (100.0 mM) and benzene (10.0 mM) were prepared in Milli-Q water
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every day.
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Stopped-flow Experiments. A stopped-flow spectrophotometer (SFS, Model
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SX20, Applied Photophysics Ltd., Leatherhead, UK) was employed to conduct the
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rapid kinetic experiments. A UV-visible spectrophotometer and a fluorimeter were
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used as the detectors with a 150 W xenon lamp as the light source. An HP computer
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workstation was employed to control the SFS and acquire the kinetic data. The
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detailed procedures for the SFS experiments are described in Supporting Information
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(SI) Text S1. pH was measured by a pH meter with a saturated KCl solution as the 6
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electrolyte. Daily calibration with proper buffer solution (pH 4.00, 6.86 and 9.18) was
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performed to ensure its accuracy. All kinetic experiments were carried out in at least
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triplicate at 18 ± 2 oC, and the data were averaged with the standard deviations < 5%
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unless otherwise noted.
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Batch Experiments. To investigate the removal of high concentration of BPA
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by the PM/BS system, reactions were initiated by quickly spiking permanganate into
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the solutions containing BPA and bisulfite while being mixed with a magnetic stirrer
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in glass bottles. Considering the interference of BPA on the analysis of phenol with
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fluorimeter equipped in SFS, the competition kinetics experiments were also
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performed in glass bottles to determine the amount of phenol generated in the process
114
of benzene oxidation by PM/BS with the presence of BPA and the details are present
115
in SI Text S2.
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Chemical Analysis for the Batch Experiments. The concentrations of phenol
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and BPA in the samples taken from the batch experiments were quantified by UPLC
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(Waters Co.). Separation was accomplished with a UPLC BEH C18 column (2.1 ×
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100 mm, 1.7 µm; waters) at 35 ± 1 oC. The mobile phase was comprised by
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methanol-0.1% formic acid aqueous solution (40:60) for phenol and by
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methanol-water (60:40) for BPA, respectively. The flow rate was 0.3 mL min-1 and
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the largest volume injection was 10 µL. The concentration of phenol and BPA were
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determined by comparing the peak area at 273 nm and 280 nm with that of the
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corresponding phenol and BPA standard, respectively. The UV-vis spectra of batch 7
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experiments were determined using Purkinje TU-1902 automatic scanning UV-visible
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spectrophotometers.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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The Reactions Involved in Organic Contaminants Oxidation in the PM/BS
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Process. As suggested by our previous study, five major reactions (Eqs 1-5 in Table 1)
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occurred in the process of organic contaminants degradation by PM/BS.36 No obvious
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absorbance of manganese intermediates (Mn(VI), Mn(V) and Mn(IV)) during Mn(III)
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generation was observed, suggesting no generation or extremely rapid generation and
133
disappearance of these manganese intermediates, thus the reaction process from
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Mn(VII) to Mn(III) was simplified to Eq 1. The generated Mn(III) was then consumed
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by the following three reactions, including: (i) reduction by HSO3− (Eq 2), (ii)
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reduction by target compounds (Eq 3), and (iii) disproportionation (Eq 4). When the
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experiments were performed open to the air, bisulfite could be oxidized by oxygen
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(Eq 5).39, 40
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Although it has been reported that Mn(III) stabilized by complexation with
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pyrophosphate (PP) displays an absorbance peak at 258 nm,43 very little is known
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about the nature of soluble aquo and/or hydroxo Mn(III) (non-complexed with other
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ligands) and the reactions of Mn(III) occurring in the PM/BS process. To verify the
143
mechanisms proposed in Eqs 1-5, the time-resolved UV absorbance at various
144
wavelengths was determined at pHini 5.0. As demonstrated in Figure S2, the
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absorbance at 230-290 nm initially increased sharply and then decreased, forming a 8
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peak at ~10 ms, followed by a gradual rebound to a plateau after 0.2 s. At the initial
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stage, MnO4− was reduced to Mn(III) by HSO3− (Eq 1) which accounted for the rapid
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increase of absorbance at 230-290 nm due to the higher molar absorption coefficient
149
of Mn(III) than MnO4−. After the peak, a rapid decrease in the absorbance at 230-290
150
nm could be attributed to (i) the decrease of MnO4− concentration, (ii) the decrease of
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generation rate of Mn(III) with the proceeding of the reaction of HSO3− with MnO4−,
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(iii) the increase of consumption rate of Mn(III) by the reaction between bisulfite and
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Mn(III). As the reaction proceeded, the concentration of bisulfite decreased and part
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of Mn(III) disproportionated to Mn2+ and MnO2 accounting for the second raise of
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absorbance at 230-290 nm as the molar absorption coefficient of MnO2 was greater
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than that of Mn(III) over this wavelength range.21 The absorbance at 300-350 nm
157
dropped sharply at the beginning, which should be ascribed to the consumption of
158
MnO4− by HSO3−, and then increased gradually, arising from the generation of MnO2.
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As such, the absorbance over the wavelength of 230-290 nm could be employed to
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describe the presence of soluble Mn(III).
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To evaluate the properties of Mn(III) generated at various pH, the change of
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absorbance at 258 nm with time during the reaction of permanganate with
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bisulfite/sulfite at a S(IV)/Mn(VII) molar ratio of 5.0 was investigated at pHini 4.5-8.0,
164
as illustrated in Figure 1. It was interesting to find that the profiles of the absorbance
165
at 258 nm at pHini 4.5-6.5 were very similar, i.e., the absorbance increased to an apex,
166
decreased hereafter and then rebound to a plateau. However, the rate of approaching 9
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to the absorbance apex progressively decreased with increasing pHini. As pHini was
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elevated to 7.0-8.0, no obvious apex was observed and the absorbance at 258 nm,
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arising from MnO2 formation, was much greater than that at lower pHini. To identify
170
the role of Mn(III) in PM/BS process at pHini 7.0-8.0, methanol was employed as a
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probe compound following the practice in our previous study.36 Figure S3 showed that
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methanol added 20 s after the initiation of the reaction between permanganate with
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bisulfite had no influence on the amount of generated MnO2, suggesting that the in
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situ formed MnO2 could not oxidize methanol. However, methanol dosed before the
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initiation of the reaction suppressed the generation of MnO2 by reducing Mn(III),
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implying that Mn(III) was responsible for the oxidation of organic contaminant at
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pHini 8.0. Therefore, the non-appearance of obvious apex at pHini 7.0-8.0 did not deny
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the generation of Mn(III) in the PM/BS process but it indicated that the
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disproportionation rate of Mn(III) (Eq 4) at pHini 7.0-8.0 was much greater than that at
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lower pHini and it was even greater than the reduction of Mn(III) by bisulfite (Eq 2).
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Our observations are consistent with the previous study that the disproportionation
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rate of Mn(III) increased with increasing pH.44 In addition, the absorbance at 525 nm
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in the PM/BS process at pHini 7.0-9.0 did not drop to zero and the steady-state
184
absorbance increased with pHini, implying that the disproportionation of Mn(III) could
185
outcompete the reduction of Mn(III) by HSO3−/SO32− at pHini 7.0-9.0 (Figure S4).
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There might be a surface association of Mn(III) with in-situ formed MnO2 under
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neutral and alkaline conditions which is associated with disappearance of apex. 10
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Consequently, the effective fraction of Mn(III) used for degrading organic
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contaminants at pHini 7.0-9.0 would be low due to the fast disproportionation rate of
190
Mn(III) over this pHini range. As shown in Figure S5, the removal of BPA in the
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PM/BS process did drop substantially as pHini increased from 6.5 to 9.0, verifying that
192
the utilization rate of Mn(III) was low when the experiments were initiated at pH ≥
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7.0.
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To further authenticate our above inference, the evolutions of absorbance at 258
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nm during the reaction of MnO4− with HSO3− of various concentrations (250-1000
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µM) open to the air or under anaerobic conditions were compared at pHini 5.0, as
197
illustrated in Figure S6. Although the oxidation of bisulfite by oxygen (Eq 5) was not
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so quick as that by permanganate,39 the presence of Mn2+ highly accelerated the
199
consumption of bisulfite by oxygen (Eq 5).40 Therefore, compared to its counterpart
200
without purging with nitrogen, the consumption of HSO3− by oxygen (Eq 5) was
201
inhibited and thus more Mn(III) was reduced by bisulfite to Mn2+ (Eq 2) and the
202
generation of MnO2 was depressed under anaerobic conditions, as shown in Figure
203
S6(A-B). The similar phenomena were observed by increasing the initial HSO3−
204
concentration from 250 to 1000 µM under aerobic conditions (Figure S6(C-D)). All
205
these evidences mentioned above did verify that (i) Mn(III) was the active oxidant in
206
the PM/BS process, (ii) the fraction of Mn(III) effective for decomposing organic
207
contaminant could be decreased by the presence of excessive bisulfite or by the rapid
208
disproportionation of Mn(III) at pHini ≥ 7.0. 11
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Mn(III) Generation and Utilization Model (MGU model). It was found that
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benzene could be transformed to phenol by the PM/BS process very rapidly at various
211
pHini levels but the amount of phenol generated at the end of reaction varied with
212
pHini, as demonstrated in Figure 2. Due to the presence of benzene in large excess (2.5
213
mM), the oxidation of phenol generated in this process by Mn(III) could be neglected.
214
This point was testified by spiking 10 µM phenol before the initiation of benzene
215
oxidation by PM/BS at pHini 5.0 and detecting the accumulation of phenol, as shown
216
in Figure S7. The amounts of phenol accumulated in the process of benzene oxidation
217
by PM/BS at pHini 5.0 without and with 10 µM spiked phenol were 11.5 µM and 20.8
218
µM, respectively. Therefore, further oxidation of generated phenol from benzene by
219
Mn(III) was neglected to simplify the mathematical model.
220
With the presence of excess benzene, pH in the PM/BS process kept almost
221
constant when the experiments were initiated at pHini ≤ 7.0 and the residual
222
absorbance at 525 nm was almost zero at pHini ≤ 7.0, indicating that Mn(III)
223
disproportionation was completely inhibited in the presence of excess benzene and no
224
MnO2 was generated at pHini ≤ 7.0 (Figure S8). Therefore, it could be concluded
225
that at pHini ≤ 7.0 permanganate was completely reduced to Mn2+ during the
226
oxidation of benzene in the PM/BS process in two steps: Mn(III) was generated by the
227
reduction of permanganate by bisulfite and then Mn(III) was reduced by benzene and
228
bisulfite to Mn2+. Different from the data shown in Figure S4, no lag phase was
229
observed in the kinetics of permanganate reduction by bisulfite at pHini 5.0-6.0 in the 12
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presence of excess benzene, which should be ascribed to the stable pH during the
231
reaction. At pHini 7.5-8.0, pH was increased to 8.0-9.0 and the absorbance at 525 nm
232
did not disappear completely at the end of reaction, which should be ascribed to the
233
MnO2 generated from Mn(III) disproportionation. This was confirmed by the
234
concomitant increase in the absorbance at 418 nm at pHini 8.0-9.0 (Figure S9), which
235
also revealed that Mn(III) disproportionated more severely at higher pHini. Therefore,
236
the disproportionation rate of Mn(III) at pHini > 7.0 was greater than the reaction rate
237
of Mn(III) with benzene and sulfite and thus MnO2 was generated, consistent with the
238
data present in Figure 1.
239
As the reaction of permanganate with bisulfite was too fast to be tracked at pHini
240
≤ 4.0, the kinetic fitting was not conducted at pHini ≤ 4.0. The loss of permanganate
241
followed pseudo-first-order kinetics with bisulfite/sulfite in 10-fold excess in the
242
presence of 2.5 mM benzene at pHini 4.5-9.0, suggesting that the reduction of
243
permanganate by bisulfite was first-order with respect to permanganate. The obtained
244
second-order reaction rate constants (k1) of permanganate reduction by bisulfite, listed
245
in Table 2, varied from 2.76×104 to 1.45×105 M-1 s-1, which were close to the value
246
(1.28(± 0.08) × 105 M-1 s-1) reported by Simándi et al.41 although they determined it at
247
pH > 9.0 with NaClO4 as background ion. Furthermore, k1 kept almost constant at
248
pHini 7.5 to 9.0, indicating that the raise of pH to 8.0-9.0 had negligible influence on
249
the rate of permanganate reduction by bisulfite during benzene oxidation by PM/BS
250
when the experiments were initiated at pH 7.5-8.0. 13
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The above analysis verified that there were five main reactions occurred during
252
benzene oxidation in the PM/BS process (Eqs 1-5): generation of Mn(III) from
253
reaction of permanganate with bisulfite/sulfite, oxidation of excess bisulfite/sulfite by
254
oxygen, consumption of Mn(III) by either reacting with benzene and bisulfite/sulfite
255
or disproportionation. Therefore, a simplified Mn(III) generation and utilization
256
model (MGU model), involving the loss of MnO4− and the generation of phenol, was
257
proposed, as shown in Eqs 6 and 7. In this model, MnO4− was reduced to Mn(III) by
258
HSO3−/SO32− with a rate constant of (Eq 6) and the generated Mn(III) oxidized
259
benzene with a rate constant of (Eq 7). The amount of Mn(III) utilized for the
260
oxidation of benzene to phenol (Eq 7) was assumed to be 1/θ (utilization rate) of total
261
Mn(III) generated from Eq 6, where 1/θ )
(14)
The generation of phenol can be expressed using second order kinetics by Eq 15, [?@0AB] "
= × λ × [Mn(III)] × [Benzene]
288
Thus,
289
[Phenol] = λ × × [Benzene] × -4 [Mn(III)]dt
290
Substitution of Eq 14 into Eq 16 and rearranging,
291
[Phenol] =
292
(10)
The consumption of MnO4− can be expressed using second order kinetics by Eq
275 276
2
"
- .×5 ×[/0100]" & e& -3 .××[/0100]" × -4 × [MnO& dt % ] × [HSO) ] × e 3
(15)
"
C× ×[/0100]×[8: 9 ]3
.× ×[/0100]& ×[;