4.7 Article

One-step synthesis of nuclear-shell structure iron-carbon nanocomposite as a persulfate activator for bisphenol A degradation

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 382, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2019.122780

Keywords

Bisphenol A; Persulfate oxidation; Sodium alginate; One-step template method

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21677088]
  2. Young Scholars Program of Shandong University [2015WLJH34]
  3. Tai Shan Scholar Foundation [ts201511003]
  4. Major Program of Shandong Province Natural Science Foundation [ZR2018ZB0211]
  5. Major Program of Shandong Province Technological Innovation Project [2018CXGC0307]

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In this study, a nuclear-shell structure iron-carbon nanocomposite catalyst (Fe@CNs) was prepared by a one-step synthesis method using sodium alginate as a template to activate persulfate (PS) for bisphenol A (BPA) degradation. The TEM image of Fe@CNs showed that the Fe nanoparticles were encapsulated in the carbon matrix with doubly protected by both the carbon shell and adherent graphite structures (carbon network). According to the X-ray diffraction pattern and elemental composition analysis, the encapsulated Fe nanoparticles were designated as Fe3C. Catalytic results show that the Fe@CNs composite has good advanced oxidation catalytic performance and can remove 96% of BPA within 30 min. The effects of coexisting anions and water matrix on the removal of BPA and TOC were also investigated. Free radical quenching experiments confirmed that several free radicals (including center dot OH, SO4 center dot-, O-2 center dot(-) and O-1(2)) acted together to cause BPA decomposition. In addition, the catalytic activity of Fe@CNs used in the cycle experiments was mainly recovered after thermal regeneration. Based on the detected intermediates, we proposed a potential BPA degradation pathway and degradation mechanism in the Fe@CNs/PS reaction system. This is a new attempt to synthesize a nuclear-shell structure of Fe@CNs using sodium alginate hydrogel as a template in a facile one-step pyrolysis.

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