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Remediation and Control Technologies
Redox Conversion of Arsenite and Nitrate in the UV/Quinone Systems Zhihao Chen, Jiyuan Jin, Xiaojie Song, Guoyang Zhang, and Shujuan Zhang Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b03538 • Publication Date (Web): 31 Jul 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 4, 2018
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Environmental Science & Technology
Redox Conversion of Arsenite and Nitrate in the UV/Quinone Systems
Zhihao Chen#, Jiyuan Jin#, Xiaojie Song, Guoyang Zhang, Shujuan Zhang*
State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, School of the Environment, Nanjing University, 163 Xianlin Avenue, Nanjing, 210023, China
*Correspondence author. Phone: +86 25 8968 0389, E-mail:
[email protected] Submitted to: Environmental Science & Technology
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Table of Contents
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ABSTRACT
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Whether superoxide radical anion (O2˙–) was a key reactive species in the oxidation of
3
arsenite (As(III)) in photochemical processes has long been a controversial issue. With
4
hydroquinone (BQH2) and 1,4-benzoquinone (BQ) as redox mediators, the
5
photochemical oxidation of As(III) and reduction of nitrate (NO3-) was carefully
6
– investigated. O2˙ , singlet oxygen (1O2), H2O2, and semiquinone radical (BQH.) were
7
all possible reactive species in the irradiated system. However, since the formation of
8
As(IV) is a necessary step in the oxidation of As(III), taking the standard reduction
9
potentials into account, the reactions between the above species and As(III) were
10
thermodynamically unfavorable. Based on radical scavenging experiments, hydroxyl
11
radical (.OH) was proved as the key species that led to the oxidation of As(III) in the
12
UV/BQH2 system. It should be noted that the .OH radicals were generated from the
13
– photolysis of H2O2, which came from the disproportionation of O2˙ and the reaction of
14
O2˙– with BQH2. Both the photo-ejected eaq- from 1(BQH2)* and the direct electron
15
transfer with 3(BQH2)* contributed to the reduction of NO3- in the UV/BQH2 process.
16
No synergistic effect was observed in the redox conversion of As(III) and NO3-, further
17
demonstrating that the role of BQH. was negligible in the studied systems. The results
18
here are helpful for a better understanding of the photochemical behaviors of quinones
19
in the aquatic environment.
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INTRODUCTION
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Quinones have been extensively investigated in photochemistry1-6 and redox
22
reactions,7-10 because of their roles in life processes (photosynthesis and respiration) as
23
electron shuttles and their structure characteristics as the representative moieties of
24
dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the nature.9-12 The photochemistry of quinone and
25
DOM has been extensively studied in the past decades.13-15 For example, it is reported
26
that under UV irradiation, DOM could reduce nitrate (NO3-)13 or oxidize arsenite
27
(As(III)).14,15
28
Formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in UV/DOM systems has been reported
29
in the literature. However, the mechanisms are unclear and are often conflicting. For
30
example, singlet oxygen (1O2) was regarded as the key ROS in the oxidation of As(III)
31
by fulvic acid under 282 nm UV irradiation,14 whereas the excited triplet states of DOM
32
and/or phenoxyl radicals, rather than ROS, were believed to play the key roles in the
33
oxidation of As(III) by UV-A irradiated Suwannee River humic acid.15 There are a few
34
reports on the oxidation of As(III) by quinones at ambient conditions (in dark without
35
UV irradiation).7 Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), hydroxyl radical (·OH), and semiquinone
36
radical (BQH·) were believed as the key species in the quinone-involved thermal
37
oxidation of As(III).7,16 However, to the best of our knowledge, there is few work on
38
the oxidation of As(III) by UV/quinones.
39
Redox conversion of As(III) and NO3- is directly related to their potential health risks
40
on humans.17-20 Although the oxidation states of nitrogen are much more complicated 2
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than those of arsenic, the reduction of NO3- in those processes are better understood
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than the oxidation of As(III).21,22 In the literature, there have been considerable
43
controversies over the key species that led to the oxidation of As(III).23-31 Some
44
researchers believed that superoxide radical anion (O2˙–) was the main oxidant in the
45
photocatalytic oxidation of As(III),23-26 whereas some others argued that O2˙– had little
46
or no role in the advanced oxidation conversion of As(III) in ultrasonic irradiation or
47
UV/TiO2 processes.27-30
48
Based on the quantum yields of H2O2 and As(III) as well as their relations with
49
dissolved oxygen (DO), it was clearly demonstrated that the oxidation of As(III)
50
undergoes an intermediate oxidation state, As(IV), rather than go directly to As(V).32
51
The existence of As(IV) has been evidenced by its transient absorption spectrum.33 The
52
standard reduction potential (E0) of H4AsIVO4/H3AsIIIO3 was reported to be 2.40 V,33
53
which is much higher than those of most ROS, except that of ·OH (E0 (·OH/H2O) =
54
2.73 V).34 Therefore, it is reasonable to infer that only a few species could oxidize
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As(III). Neither O2˙– (E0 (O2˙–/H2O2) = 1.71 V)34 nor 1O2 (E0 (1O2/O2˙–) = 0.67 V)35
56
could oxidize As(III) to As(IV). This thermodynamic criterion is pivotal in untangling
57
the disagreements on the oxidation mechanism of As(III), but was unfortunately
58
ignored in the controversy.
59
NO3- and As(III) have been frequently detected together in some surface water,
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groundwater and arsenic-related industrial wastewater.36,37 It is well known that NO3-
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can generate ·OH through UV photolysis with a quantum yield of 0.09.38 The 3
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concentration of NO3- ranges from 23 μM to 779 μM in arsenic-containing ground and
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surface waters.17,36 Because of this, a UV/NO3- system has been proposed for the
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oxidation of As(III).17 In our recent work,39 a concerted redox conversion of As(III) and
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NO3- was observed in a photochemical process with acetylacetone (AA) as a photo-
66
activator. The two carbonyl groups in AA make it structurally similar to quinones. In
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the photo-conversion of As(III) and NO3-, the excited AA (AA*) was believed to act as
68
a BQH·-like redox mediator.39 However, by taking the consumption of the redox
69
mediators in the photochemical processes into account, the electron shuttling abilities
70
of AA, hydroquinone (BQH2), and 1,4-benzoquinone (BQ) were quite different.39 To
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convert the same amount of As(III), the consumption of AA was 2-4 orders of
72
magnitude lower than those of BQH2 and BQ.39
73
The mechanisms for the concerted redox conversion of As(III) and NO3- in the
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UV/AA process were comprehensively explained based on both experimental results
75
and theoretical calculations.39 Although the photochemistry of quinones has been
76
extensively studied,1-5 it is unclear yet how As(III) is converted in the UV/quinone
77
systems and whether there was a synergistic effect in the redox conversion of As(III)
78
and NO3- in the UV/quinone processes, as observed in the UV/AA process. Therefore,
79
in this work, we used two simple chemicals, BQH2 (reduced state) and BQ (oxidized
80
state), to investigate both the oxidation of As(III) and the reduction of NO3- in the
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UV/quinone systems to evaluate the electron shuttling ability of quinones. The
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experimental designs are helpful to exclude the uncertainty caused by the variant 4
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compositions of DOM from different sources. The key species in the oxidation of
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As(III) was clarified, which might be helpful to end the disputes in the oxidation of
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As(III).
86 87
EXPERIMENTAL
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Chemicals. Na3AsO3 (analytical grade), Na3AsO4 (analytical grade), potassium
89
hyperoxide (KO2), 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-1-oxide (DMPO), and superoxide
90
dismutase (SOD, 5673 units/mg solid) were bought from Sigma-Aldrich, USA. BQH2
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and 2-isopropanol (IPA) were purchased from Nanjing Chemical Regent Co. Ltd.,
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China. KH2PO4 (HPLC grade) and 2-hydroxy-terephthalic acid (HTPA, ≥ 98.0%,
93
HPLC grade) were obtained from Aladdin Industrial Corporation (Shanghai, China).
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BQ (analytical grade), NaNO3 (GR grade), H2O2 (30 wt%) and hydrochloric acid (HCl,
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36-38%, GR grade) were bought from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd., China.
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Catalase (CAT, 2000-5000 units/mg protein) from bovine liver was purchased from
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Biosharp Co. Ltd., China. N, N-diethyl-p-phenylenediamine (DPD) and peroxidase
98
(POD) from horseradish (150 U/mg) were bought from Sigma-Aldrich Germany and
99
Sigma Switzerland, respectively. Terephthalic acid (TPA, 99%) was purchased from
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Macklin Co. Ltd., China. KBH4 was purchased from Shandong Xiya Reagent Co. Ltd.,
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China. All the chemicals were used as received without any further treatment.
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A water purification system (Shanghai Ulupure Industrial Co. Ltd., China) was used
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to produce ultrapure water (18.25 MΩ·cm). All the solutions were adjusted to pH 6.8 5
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with diluted HCl and NaOH solutions. Stock solution of KO2 (100 mM) was prepared
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and used immediately.
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A surface water was taken from Jiuxiang River (JXR) near Nanjing University. The
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water was firstly filtered by a 0.22 μm filter membrane and some of the water quality
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parameters of the surface water are listed in Table S1.
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Irradiation Experiments. A photo-reactor equipped with a 300 W medium-mercury
110
(MP-Hg) lamp was used for irradiation experiments. The quartz sample rubes rovolved
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around the lamp during UV irradiation. The emission spectrum of the MP-Hg lamp was
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determined with a miniature fiber optic spectrometer (USB2000+, Ocean Optics, Inc.,
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USA). The light intensity was determined with a radiometer (Photoelectric Instrument
114
Factory of Beijing Normal University, China) equipped with a sensor of peak sensitivity
115
at 365 nm. More details about the experimental setup are available in our previous
116
report.39
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Sunlight irradiation experiments were carried out in a sunny day (on June 6th, 2018)
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from 10:00 AM to 6:30 PM on the building roof of School of the Environmental at
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Nanjing University (Nanjing, China: 32°N latitude, 118°E longitude).40 The
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temperature ranged from 22℃ to 30 ℃.
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In purging experiments, all the solutions were firstly bubbled with highly purified N2
122
or N2O (> 99.99%) for at least 30 min and then kept bubbling throughout the irradiation
123
process. All experiments were conducted at least in duplicate.
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Measurement of As(III), As(V), NO3-, NO2- and NH4+. Arsenic analysis was
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conducted with an atomic fluorescence spectrometer (Beijing Beifen-Ruili Analytic
126
Instrument Co. Ltd., China) coupled with a liquid chromatograph (Persee Co. Ltd.,
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China). The concentrations of NO3- and NO2- were determined with an ion
128
chromatograph (IC1100, Dionex Co. Ltd., USA) coupled with an anion suppressor
129
(ASRS 300 × 4 mm, Thermo Scientific Co. Ltd., USA) and a 4 µm × 250 mm anion-
130
exchange resin chromatographic column (AS19, Thermo Scientific Co. Ltd., USA).
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More experimental details about the chromatography analysis are available in Text S1.
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Measurement of BQH2 and BQ. The concentrations of BQH2 and BQ were
133
determined with a high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) system (Ultimate
134
3000, Dionex Co. Ltd., USA) equipped with a C8 column (4.6 × 150 mm, 2.7 μm,
135
Waters Co. Ltd., USA). The main products in the UV/quinone systems were identified
136
with an ultra-performance liquid chromatograph (UPLC, Ultimate 3000, Dionex, USA)
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combined with a tandem mass spectroscopy system (MS/MS) (Thermo Scientific Q
138
ExactiveTM Focus Orbitrap, USA). More analytical details are available in Text S2.
139
Measurement of H2O2, DO, and ROS. The concentration of H2O2 was determined
140
with the DPD-POD method.41 DO was measured with a detector equipped with a
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lumination probe (LDO 10103, HACH Co. Ltd., USA). An in situ UV-electron spin
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resonance (ESR) system (Bruker DRX 500, Germany) was used for the detection of
143
ROS with DMPO as the probing molecule and a 180 W MP-Hg lamp as the light source.
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The running parameters are as follows: resonance frequency, 9.772 GHz; center field,
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3480.0 G; sweep width, 200 G; microwave power, 19.922 mW.
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Determination of the Steady State Concentration of ·OH. The steady-state
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concentration of ·OH ([·OH]ss) was measured with TPA (5 µM) as the probe and the
148
formation rate of HTPA as the kinetic variable:42
149
d[HTPA ] = k . OH,TPA [TPA]0 [⋅ OH]ss Y dt
(1)
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where d[HTPA]/dt is the formation rate of HTPA. k.OH,TPA represents the second-order
151
reaction rate constant between ·OH and TPA. [TPA]0 is the initial concentration of TPA.
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Y represents the yield of HTPA.42
153 154
RESULTS AND DICUSSION
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Redox Conversion in the UV/Quinone Systems. The photochemical conversion of
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quinones, As(III), and NO3- was conducted in air-equilibrated solutions of pH around
157
6.8. A two-stage kinetics was observed for the tested chemicals (Figure 1), which are
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related with the concentration of DO (Figure 2). In the UV/quinone systems, As(III)
159
was firstly oxidized at the pseudo-first-order and then reduced back to As(III) with the
160
depletion of DO (Figure 2). In the literature, the photosensitized oxidation of As(III) by
161
Suwannee River humic acid15 and the photo-reduction of NO3- in the presence of
162
DOM13 were also reported following the pseudo-first-order kinetics. Therefore, the rate
163
constants in Table 1 were obtained by fitting the kinetic data with the pseudo-first-order
164
kinetics within the first stage to avoid the interference caused by the accumulated 8
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degradation products and the change of experimental conditions (mainly the
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concentration of DO).
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BQ was nearly completely transformed within several minutes (Figure 3). The
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transformation products of BQ were mainly BQH2 (more than 60%) and
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hydroxybenzoquinone (BQ-OH) (Figure S1). The generated BQH2 in the UV/BQ
170
system began to decompose at a pseudo-first-order rate constant (k1) (0.0075 min-1) of
171
1/55 of the k1 of BQ (0.3899 min-1), whereas the direct photo-conversion rate constant
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of BQH2 (0.0115 min-1) was about 1/32 of that of BQ (Figure 3). As the light intensity
173
was increased from 4.0 mW/cm2 (Figure 3) to 7.1 mW/cm2 (Figure 1), the k1 values of
174
BQ and BQH2 were increased several times. However, the k1 ratio of BQH2 to BQ was
175
nearly unchanged (1/34, Table 1). Only a trace amount of BQ was detected in the
176
UV/BQH2 system (Figure 3), because of the limited formation of BQ and the rapid
177
back-conversion of BQ to BQH2.
178
Considering the fast photo-conversion of BQ, the obtained k1 values of As(III) and
179
NO3- in the UV/BQ system (Figure 1) were actually compound results of the reactions
180
involved with both BQ and its photo-products, such as BQH2 and BQ-OH. It is clearly
181
shown in Table 1 that the presence of BQH2 significantly enhanced the photo-
182
conversion of both As(III) and NO3-, whereas only a slight enhancement was observed
183
in the UV/BQ system.
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The addition of NO3- showed obvious enhancement effects on the oxidation of
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As(III) (Figure 1). However, the enhancement effect caused by addition of NO3- was 9
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negligible in the UV/quinone systems. Since the absorption cross section of NO3- is
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much smaller than that of BQH2 (Figure S2), under the given conditions, NO3- absorbed
188
less than 1% of the incident light at 254 nm. The k1 of the direct photolysis of NO3-
189
(0.0021 min-1) was 16.2% of that in the UV/BQH2 system (0.0129 min-1) (Table 1). In
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the presence of BQH2, the direct photolysis of NO3- might be even less due to the
191
competition of BQH2 for photons. As a result, the addition of NO3- led to a negligible
192
effect on As(III) oxidation in the UV/quinone systems.
193
To make a clear comparison, a set of k1-related data was defined as below:
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k1,Ct represents the k1 of the contaminant (Ct) in a Ct-only solution;
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k1,Ct-RM represents the k1 of the Ct in a Ct-redox mediator (RM) binary solution;
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k1,RM-Ct represents the k1 of the RM in a Ct-RM binary solution;
197
k1,Ct-RM(tri) represents the k1 of the Ct in a Ct-Ct’-RM ternary solution (with both a
198
RM and another Ct’).
199
Thus, the k1,Ct-RM/k1,Ct ratio reflects the efficiency of the RM in enhancing the photo-
200
conversion of Ct. The k1,RM-Ct/k1,Ct-RM ratio reflects the consumption of the RM per
201
equivalent of Ct in the UV/RM process. The k1,Ct-RM(tri)/k1,Ct-RM ratio reflects the effect
202
of the second contaminant (Ct’) on the conversion of Ct in the UV/RM process.
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As shown in Table 1, under the given conditions, the k1 of As(III) oxidation/NO3-
204
reduction in the UV/BQ process (k1,Ct-BQ) was slightly higher than those of the UV
205
control (k1,Ct). Comparatively, BQH2 was more efficient for the reduction of NO3-
206
whereas AA was the most efficient in the oxidation of As(III). Due to the rapid photo10
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conversion of BQ to BQH2 and BQ-OH, the k1,RM-Ct/k1,Ct-RM ratio is meaningless for
208
BQ, but is valuable for BQH2. The k1,RM-Ct/k1,Ct-RM ratios of BQH2 were 1.92 and 2.62,
209
respectively, in the oxidation of As(III) and the reduction of NO3- (Table 2), indicating
210
that to convert one molecular As(III) or NO3- needs at least two molecular BQH2. The
211
k1,RM-Ct/k1,Ct-RM ratio of AA for As(III) was only 0.2, indicating that to fulfil the
212
conversion of a same amount of As(III), the consumption of AA was only 1/10 to that
213
of BQH2. In other words, in the oxidation of As(III), the electron shuttling ability of
214
BQH2 was weaker than that of AA. However, in the reduction of NO3-, BQH2 was more
215
efficient than AA. Furthermore, the k1,Ct-RM(tri-)/k1,Ct-RM ratios indicate that there was no
216
synergistic effect between the oxidation of As(III) and the reduction of NO3- in the
217
UV/BQH2 process whereas significant synergistic effects were observed in the UV/AA
218
process (Table 2). These differences suggest that the mechanisms in the UV/BQH2
219
process were different from those in the UV/AA process.
220
The Photochemistry of Quinones. The photo-conversion of BQ and BQH2 in
221
aqueous solutions have been carefully studied in the literature.1,2,6 The quantum yield
222
for the intersystem conversion (ΦISC) from 1(BQ)* to 3(BQ)* was reported as 1.0.1 The
223
3
224
0.04.2 ·OH was captured in cage by BQ to form BQ-OH·.1,2 BQ-OH· then reacted with
225
BQ at a rate constant of (6.5±0.3)×107 M-1 s-1 to form BQ-OH and BQ˙–.2 In the
226
absence of other chemicals, BQ˙– disproportionated to BQ and BQH2 at a rate constant
227
of (1.5±0.1)×108 M-1 s-1.2 BQH2 had a ΦISC of 0.39.6 Therefore, it could either emit
(BQ)* reacted with H2O to generate ·OH and BQH· (pKa = 4.0) with a Φ οf 0.47±
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fluorescence or underwent direct photolysis to generate hydrated electron (eaq-).6 The
229
generated 3(BQH2)* from ISC process was strongly reductive and could react with O2
230
and NO3- through direct electron transfer.6
231
To sum up, the photochemical and photophysical processes of BQ and BQH2 are
232
schematically shown in Scheme 1. There are four pathways for the conversion of
233
3
234
reacted with H2O to generate ·OH, and (4) reduced to BQH· by accepting an electron
235
from As(III) (Scheme 1a).
(BQ)*: (1) relaxed to BQ through phosphorescence emission, (2) quenched by O2, (3)
236
Mechanism Analysis for the Oxidation of As(III) in the UV/Quinone Systems.
237
Since the experiments were conducted at pH 6.8, Eh7 values were considered to judge
238
the thermodynamic feasibility of the reactions (Figure S3 and Table S2). Based on the
239
Eh7 values, the electron transfer between 3(BQ)* and As(III) was thermodynamically
240
favorable. However, the direct electron transfer between 3(BQ)* and As(III) was
241
negligible, because the reaction between the solvent (H2O) and 3(BQ)* dominated over
242
the other three pathways. Once ·OH was generated, it quickly reacted with another
243
molecule of BQ to form BQ-OH· at a rate constant of 6.6×109 M-1 s-1.43 The formation
244
of BQ-OH· occurred in the solvent cage. As a result, few ·OH could diffuse out and
245
react with As(III). This probably explained the argument on whether there was free ·OH
246
in the UV irradiated BQ solution.1,3,44
247
In neutral solutions, BQH· deprotonated to BQ˙– and rapidly disproportionated to BQ
248
and BQH2.6 The direct electron transfer between BQ˙– and As(III) or NO3- was 12
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thermodynamically possible, but kinetically limited, as evidenced by the low k1 values
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in the UV/BQ system (Table 1). Thus, for the oxidation of As(III) in the UV/BQH2
251
process, attention should be paid to the two ROS: 1O2 and O2˙–.
252
As illustrated in Table 3, both 1O2 and O2˙– had several possible reaction pathways.
253
Although single electron transfer between 1O2 and As(III) was proposed as a possible
254
reaction (Reaction 1.1 in Table 3),14 there was no experimental evidence to support this
255
statement. As a matter of fact, such a reaction is thermodynamically unfavorable,
256
because the Eh7 of 1O2/O2˙– was much lower than that of As(IV)/As(III) (Figure S3).
257
1
258
(Reaction 1.3 in Table 3) 46. Considering the rate constants and the concentration levels
259
of the reactants, the quenching reaction with the solvent (Reaction 1.2 in Table 3)
260
dominated in the conversion of 1O2. It is known that 1O2 has a longer life time in D2O
261
than in H2O.47 The replacement of H2O with D2O as the solvent led to no kinetic solvent
262
isotope effect on the oxidation of As(III) in the UV/BQH2 process (Figure S4),
263
excluding the contribution of 1O2 in the generation of BQH· (Reaction 1.4 in Table 3).
264
– O2˙ was proposed to play a key role in the oxidation of As(III) (Reaction 2.1 in Table
265
3).24 One evidence for this conclusion is that As(III) was oxidized in a KO2 solution.48
266
This opinion was refuted by another work,30 in which the main conclusion was that the
267
As(III) oxidation by the addition of KO2 was not due to O2˙– but due to H2O2. The
268
experimental evidence for the later conclusion is: KO2 produces not only O2˙– but also
269
H2O2. Adding 0.5 mM KO2 produced about 0.2 mM H2O2. The As(III) oxidation
O2 could be quenched by both the solvent (Reaction 1.2 in Table 3)45 and BQH2
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efficiencies by addition of 0.2 mM H2O2 into 75 μM As(III) solution were very similar
271
to those by the addition of 0.5 mM KO2.30 We conducted the experiments with KO2 and
272
H2O2 at three pHs (3.2, 6.8, 10.7) (Figure S5). The oxidation of As(III) was effective at
273
pH 10.7, but ineffective at pH 3.2 and 6.8. The results are exactly the same as those in
274
the previous report.30 The generation of O2˙– from KO2 in the acidic solutions should
275
be close to that in the alkaline solution.30 The pKa of HO2· was 4.8.49 Theoretically,
276
there should not be such a large difference in As(III) oxidation between the KO2
277
solutions of pH 6.8 and 10.7, if O2˙– was able to oxidize As(III).
278
– – The role of O2˙ was further excluded by the addition of SOD. SOD reacts with O2˙
279
at a rate constant of 2.2×109 M-1 S-1 to form H2O2.50 Addition of SOD slightly enhanced
280
the oxidation of As(III) (the k1 was increased from 0.0090 min-1 to 0.0103 min-1, Table
281
S3), demonstrating that the role of O2˙– in the UV/BQH2 process for As(III) oxidation
282
was negligible.
283
Taking the rate constants and the concentration levels into account, it is reasonable
284
to infer that Reactions 2.2 and 2.3 (Table 3) dominated in the reactions of O2˙–. The
285
generated BQ-OH· and BQ˙– from the above two reactions could then react with O2˙–
286
to form BQ-OH (Reaction 2.4 in Table 3). The fraction of the disproportionation of
287
O2˙– (Reaction 2.5 in Table 3) might be small, but was crucial in the oxidation of As(III).
288
H2O2 is the disproportionation product of O2˙–, which is known as both an oxidant and
289
a reductant. Under UV irradiation, H2O2 decomposed to ·OH with a quantum yield of
290
1.0 (Reaction 3 in Table 3).51,52 The reactions of H2O2 with As(III) and NO3- were 14
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thermodynamically possible but kinetically limited.27 Under the given conditions (pH
292
6.8), the dark oxidation of 0.1 mM As(III) by 0.2 mM H2O2 was less than 4% within
293
25 min, whereas the As(III) oxidation reached 100% under UV irradiation (Figure S5).
294
The pH-dependence in the dark oxidation of As(III) by H2O2 (Figure S5) could be
295
explained with the increased reduction potential difference between H2O2 and As(III)
296
with the increase of pH (Figure S6). Both H2O2 and ·OH were detected in the tested
297
solutions (Figure S7). It should be noted that the detected H2O2 concentration was the
298
residual concentration. A large amount of H2O2 generated in the UV/BQH2 process
299
have already been consumed in the oxidation process. The oxidation of As(III) was
300
drastically inhibited by the addition of either CAT (a H2O2 scavenger) or IPA (a ·OH
301
scavenger) (Table S3), indicating that ·OH played the pivotal role in the oxidation of
302
As(III).
303
The formation of ·OH in the UV/quinone systems was also verified with ESR (Figure
304
S8). DMPO-OH signals were observed in the irradiated DMPO solution, because of the
305
direct photo-ionization of DMPO.53 In the presence of BQH2, the DMPO-OH signals
306
were significantly enhanced. The addition of IPA to the UV/BQH2 system led to a
307
drastic decrease of DMPO-OH signals, demonstrating the formation of ·OH in the
308
UV/BQH2 system. Besides DMPO-OH signals, DMPO-H signals were also observed
309
in the UV/BQH2 system, which could be attributed to the photo-ejected electrons from
310
1
311
UV/BQH2 system) were observed in the UV/BQ system. However, the DMPO-OH
(BQH2)* (Scheme 1b). Strong DMPO-OH signals (almost 10 times to that in the
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signals in the UV/BQ system were not affected by the addition of IPA. This is because
313
the ·OH radicals generated from 3(BQ)* was captured in cage by BQ to form BQ-
314
OH·,1,2 which is insensitive to IPA.
315
O2˙– is prone to self-disproportionation to H2O2 and H2O at a rate constant of 2.3 ×
316
106 M-1 s-1.49 The second-order rate constants for the reactions of HO2. and O2˙– with
317
DMPO are 6.6 × 103 M-1 s-1 and 10 M-1 s-1, respectively, whereas that of .OH with
318
DMPO is 1.8 ×109 M-1 s-1.54 Therefore, the low reactivity of O2˙– with DMPO might
319
account for why there is no O2˙– detected by ESR (Figure S8).
320
The steady-state concentration of ·OH in the UV/BQH2 system (4.93 × 10-14 M) was
321
one order of magnitude higher than that of the UV control (4.33 × 10-15 M, Figure S7),
322
indicating that most of the ·OH radicals in the UV/BQH2 system came from the reaction
323
of 3(BQH2)* with O2 (Scheme 1b). The photo-oxidation of As(III) was nearly
324
completely inhibited by N2-purging (Table S3), providing a further support for the
325
above conclusion (the O2 O2˙ H2O2 ·OH route) and excluding the contribution
326
of BQ˙–.
–
327
For the reaction of ·OH, there are three main competitors: BQH2, BQ, and As(III),
328
with similar rate constants (Reactions 4.1-4.3 in Table 3). Due to the rapid conversion
329
of BQ in the photochemical system (Figure 1), the concentration of BQ was much lower
330
than those of BQH2 and As(III) and therefore could be neglected. Single electron
331
transfer occurs between ·OH and As(III), leading to the formation of As(IV). As(IV) is
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an unstable intermediate and can serve as both a strong oxidant and a strong reductant,33
333
which explains the reduction of As(V) to As(III) after the depletion of DO (Figure 2).
334
Besides the electron transfer reaction with BQH2 (Reaction 5.1 in Table 3), As(IV)
335
could also reduce O2 to O2˙– (Reaction 5.2 in Table 3) or directly disproportionate to
336
As(III) and As(V) at a rate constant of 8.4×108 M-1 s-1 (Reaction 5.3 in Table 3).33
337
– Based on the E values (Figure S3), the reduction of As(V) to As(III) by O2˙ is
338
thermodynamically possible. By adding 0.5 mM KO2 to 0.01-0.1 mM As(V) solutions
339
of pH 3.2, 6.7, and 10.7, no reduction of As(V) to As(III) was observed, demonstrating
340
that in the given system, O2˙– was not important in either the oxidation of As(III) to
341
As(V) or the reduction of As(V) to As(III). The overall results are determined by the
342
abundance of the reactive species and the reaction kinetics. As evidenced in the ESR
343
results (Figure S8), it is .OH, instead of O2˙–, that played the key role in the oxidation
344
of As(III) by UV/BQH2.
345
Mechanism Analysis for the Reduction of NO3- in the UV/Quinone Systems. In
346
all the three processes (UV, UV/BQ, UV/BQH2), NH4+ and NO2- were detected as the
347
conversion products of NO3- (Figure S9). As aforementioned, the direct photolysis of
348
NO3- in the UV/quinone systems was negligible, because of the small absorption cross
349
section of NO3-. Therefore, there were mainly two pathways for the reduction of NO3-
350
in the UV/BQH2 process: One was the direct electron transfer between 3(BQH2)* and
351
NO3- (Pathway I in Scheme 1b), and another one was the reduction by the photo-ejected
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eaq- (Pathway II in Scheme 1b, Reaction 6.1 in Table 3). The generation of eaq- in the
353
UV/BQH2 process was confirmed in the ESR test (Figure S8).
354
Both 1(BQH2)* and 3(BQH2)* could be quenched by O2. N2-purging significantly
355
enhanced the photo-reduction of NO3- from 0.0123 min-1 to 0.0932 min-1 (Figure S10a),
356
demonstrating the importance of the excited BQH2 in Scheme 1b and Reaction 6.2 in
357
Table 3.55 N2O-purging also led to an enhancement effect on the photo-reduction of
358
NO3- (Figure S10a), but to a much less extent (0.0354 min-1) than that of N2-purging,
359
because of the two contrary effects of N2O-purging: the positive effect caused by the
360
elimination of DO (Reaction 6.2 in Table 3) and the negative effect caused by the
361
conversion of eaq- to ·OH (Reaction 6.3 in Table 3). The ·OH converted from eaq- could
362
also oxidize BQH2 (Figure S10b) and the reduction products of NO3- (NO2- and NH4+),
363
partially offset the enhanced Pathway I. The k1 values of NO3- reduction in N2-purged
364
and N2O-purged solutions indicate that Pathway II contributed more (about 60%) to the
365
reduction of NO3-. The contribution of Pathway I was about 40%. This is somewhat
366
different from the conclusion in a previous work,6 in which it is stated that 3(BQH2)*
367
played a major role in the photochemical transformation of BQH2. The reason for this
368
difference has already been given in this literature:6 The former conclusion was drawn
369
from a transient system. In steady-state irradiation systems, the relative importance of
370
electron ejection might be the more efficient pathway.
371
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Environmental Implications. Using concentrations higher than the realistic level is a
373
common approach in mechanism study for the sake of convenience and accuracy in
374
determination. The concentrations of As(III) and NO3- used in this work were selected
375
based on their realistic levels in environment. It should be noted that BQ was unstable
376
at ambient conditions and would experience rapid conversion under either acidic or
377
alkaline conditions (Figure S11). Under UV irradiation, BQ was rapidly converted to
378
BQH2 and BQ-OH (Figure 3). BQH2 was stable in acidic or neutral solutions but
379
underwent significant conversion at alkaline conditions (Figure S11). Under the given
380
pH in this work (pH 6.8), there was no obvious change in the concentration of BQH2
381
within 50 hours in dark (Figure S11). Therefore, special attentions should be paid to the
382
UV/BQH2 system.
383
Considering the common concentrations of DOM in sunlit water (1-10 mg/L),11
384
the concentration of quinones in Figures 1-3 (0.5 mM) was a bit of high. To verify the
385
environmental implications of quinones, the oxidation of As(III) and reduction of NO3-
386
were checked in both an ultrapure water and a surface water (JXR water) at a quinone
387
concentration of 0.05 mM (close to the realistic concentration level in sunlit water)
388
under solar irradiation. As shown in Figure S12, both the oxidation of As(III) and the
389
reduction of NO3- were enhanced by quinones. The oxidation of As(III) was more
390
significant than the reduction of NO3-. The JXR water had a specific UV254
391
absorbance (SUVA254nm) of 3.55 ± 0.20 L/(mg·m) (Table S1), indicating a high
392
concentration of aromatic DOM. As compared to that in the ultrapure water, the photo19
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oxidation of As(III) was significantly enhanced by the JXR water and the effect of the
394
JXR matrix was similar to that of BQ, demonstrating the environmental relevance of
395
quinones in the photo-conversion of oxyanions. The results here are helpful for the
396
better understanding of the natural processes of quinones and oxyanions in aquatic
397
environment.
398 399
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
400
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
401
Chromatography analysis (Text S1 and S2), HPLC and UPLC-MS profiles (Figure S1),
402
UV spectra (Figure S2), reduction potential ladders (Figure S3), isotope effect
403
experiments (Figure S4), As(III) oxidation by KO2 and H2O2 (Figure S5), Eh-pH
404
relationship of H2O2 and arsenic species (Figure S6), generation of H2O2 and steady-
405
state concentration of ·OH (Figure S7), ESR results (Figure S8), products of nitrate
406
(Figure S9), effect of N2 and N2O-purging (Figure S10), evolution of quinones under
407
ambient conditions (Figure S11), irradiation experiments with JXR water (Figure S12),
408
water quality parameters of JXR water (Table S1), E values (Table S2), and quenching
409
experiments (Table S3). This material is available free of charge via the Internet at
410
http://pubs.acs.org.
411 412
AUTHOR INFORMATION
413
Corresponding Author 20
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* Correspondence author. Phone: +86 25 8968 0389, E-mail:
[email protected] 415
Notes
416
#
417
financial interests.
The two authors contributed equally to the paper. The authors declare no competing
418 419
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
420
This work was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
421
China (21522702, 21677070). The work was also supported by the Enhancement
422
Program for Outstanding PhD candidates of Nanjing University.
423 424
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rate constants for reactions of hydrated electrons, hydrogen atoms and hydroxyl
583
radicals (⋅OH/⋅O−) in aqueous solution. J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data 1988, 17 (2),
584
513-886.
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585
Figure, Scheme and Table Captions
586 587
Figure 1. The evolution of (a) BQ, (b) BQH2, (c) As(III), and (d) NO3- in mono-,
588
binary and ternary solutions under UV irradiation (air-equilibrated, initial
589
pH around 6.8). [BQ]0 = [BQH2]0 = 0.5 mM, [As(III)]0 = [NO3-]0 = 0.1 mM,
590
light intensity: 7.1 mW/cm2. Scatters: experimental data, curves: the
591
pseudo-first-order fitting.
592 593
Figure 2. The evolution of arsenic and DO in the UV and UV/BQH2 process under a light intensity of 5.5 mW/cm2. [BQH2]0 = 0.5 mM, [As(III)]0 = 0.1 mM.
594
Figure 3. The photo-conversion of (a) BQ and (b) BQH2 under a light intensity of 4.0
595
mW/cm2 (pH 6.8, air-equilibrated). Symbol: experiment data, Curve: the
596
pseudo first-order kinetic fitting. The data near the curves are the k1 values
597
in corresponding processes.
598
Scheme 1. Photochemical and photophysical processes of (a) BQ and (b) BQH2 in the
599
presence of As(III) and NO3-. The dotted red arrows indicate low possibility.
600
– The blue arrows indicate the disproportionation of BQ˙ .
601 602 603 604 605
Table 1. The k1 (min-1) of quinones, As(III), and NO3- in mono, binary and ternary solutions. Table 2. The k1 ratios in the redox conversion of As(III) and NO3- in the three photochemical processes. Table 3. Reaction pathways of the reactive species in the UV/quinone systems. 30
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606 607
Figure 1. The evolution of (a) BQ, (b) BQH2, (c) As(III), and (d) NO3- in mono-, binary
608
and ternary solutions under UV irradiation (air-equilibrated, initial pH around 6.8).
609
[BQ]0 = [BQH2]0 = 0.5 mM, [As(III)]0 = [NO3-]0 = 0.1 mM, light intensity: 7.1 mW/cm2.
610
Scatters: experimental data, curves: the pseudo-first-order fitting.
611
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612 613
Figure 2. The evolution of arsenic and DO in the UV and UV/BQH2 process under a
614
light intensity of 5.5 mW/cm2 in the presence of As(III). [BQH2]0 = 0.5 mM, [As(III)]0
615
= 0.1 mM.
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616 617
Figure 3. The photo-conversion of (a) BQ and (b) BQH2 under a light intensity of 4.0
618
mW/cm2 (pH 6.8, air-equilibrated). Symbol: experiment data, Curve: the pseudo first-
619
order kinetic fitting. The data near the curves are the k1 values in corresponding
620
processes.
621
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622
Scheme 1. Photochemical and photophysical processes of (a) BQ and (b) BQH2 in the
623
presence of As(III) and NO3-. The dotted red arrows indicate low possibility. The blue
624
arrows indicate the disproportionation of BQ˙–.
625
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626
Table 1. The k1 (min-1) of quinones, As(III), and NO3- in mono, binary and ternary
627
solutions.
Solution a
k1,Q
Solution
k1,As(III)
Solution
k1,NO3-
BQH2
0.0315
As(III)
0.0059
NO3-
0.0021
BQH2/NO3-
0.0338
As(III)/NO3-
0.0098
NO3-/BQH2
0.0113
BQH2/As(III)
0.0343
As(III)/BQH2
0.0179
NO3-/As(III)
0.0129
BQH2/NO3-/As(III)
0.0364
As(III)/NO3-/BQH2
0.0190
NO3-/As(III)/BQH2
0.0135
BQ
1.0097
As(III)
0.0059
NO3-
0.0021
BQ/NO3-
1.1585
As(III)/NO3-
0.0098
NO3-/BQ
0.0079
BQ/As(III)
1.0578
As(III)/BQ
0.0089
NO3-/As(III)
0.0113
BQ/NO3-/As(III)
1.0570
As(III)/NO3-/BQ
0.0095
NO3-/As(III)/BQ
0.0077
[AA]0 = [BQ]0 = [BQH2]0 = 0.5 mM, [As(III)]0 = [NO3-]0 = 0.1 mM, light intensity:
628
a
629
7.1 mW/cm2.
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630
Table 2. The k1 ratios in the redox conversion of As(III) and NO3- in the three
631
photochemical processes.
k1 ratio
Ct a
BQ
BQH2
AAb
As(III)
1.51
3.03
126.4
NO3-
3.76
6.14
4.33
As(III)
118.8
1.92
0.20
NO3-
146.6
2.62
9.58
As(III)
1.07
1.06
1.29
NO3-
0.97
1.05
1.71
k1,Ct-RM/k1,Ct
k1,RM-Ct/k1,Ct-RM
k1,Ct-RM(tri-)/k1,Ct-RM
Ct represents As(III) or NO3-, [As(III)]0 = [NO3-]0 = 0.1 mM, [AA]0 = [BQ]0 = [BQH2]0
632
a
633
= 0.5 mM, light intensity: 7.1 mW/cm2.
634
b
The data are cited from reference 39.
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Table 3. Reaction pathways of the reactive species in the UV/quinone systems. k2 (M-1 s-1)
Reaction types
Reference
O2 + As(III) → As(IV) + O2˙– a
-- b
Electron transfer
15
H2O → O2 + *H2O c
--
Quenching
45
O2 + BQH2 → BQH2* + O2
7.0 × 106
Quenching
46
O2 + BQH2 → BQH· + O2˙– + H+
--
Electron transfer
46
O2˙– + As(III) + 2H+ → As(IV) + H2O2
3.6 × 106
Electron transfer
28
2.2
O2˙– + BQH2 + H+ → BQH· + H2O2
1.7 × 107
Electron transfer
6
2.3
O2˙– + BQ → BQ˙– + O2
9.0 × 108
Electron transfer
28
2.4
O2˙– + BQH· + H+→ BQ-OH + H2O
--
Radical recombination
6
2.5
O2˙– + O2˙– + 2H+ → O2 + H2O2
2.3 × 106
Disproportionation
49
H2O2
3
H2O2 → 2·OH (hv, Φ = 1.0)
--
Photolysis
51,52
·OH
4.1
·OH + BQH2 → BQH· + H2O
5.2 × 109
Electron transfer
55
4.2
·OH + As(III) → As(IV)
8.5 × 109
Electron transfer
33
Species
Reaction
Formulas
1O 2
1.1
1
1.2
1O + 2
1.3
1
1.4
1
2.1
O2˙–
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As(IV)
eaq-
Page 40 of 40
4.3
·OH + BQ → BQ-OH
6.6 × 109
Electron transfer
43
5.1
As(IV) + BQH2 → BQH· + As(III)
--
Electron transfer
This work
5.2
As(IV) + O2 → As(V) + O2˙–
1.4 × 109
Electron transfer
33
5.3
2As(IV) → As(V) + As(III)
3.6 × 108
Disproportionation
33
6.1
8eaq- + NO3- + 10H+ → NH4+ + 3H2O
9.7 × 109
Electron transfer
55
6.2
eaq- + O2 → O2˙–
1.9 × 1010
Electron transfer
55
6.3
eaq- + N2O + H+ → ·OH + N2
9.1 × 109
Electron transfer
55
a
Blue font means low possibility.
b
“--” represents “not available”.
c
Bold font indicates dominant pathway.
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