4.8 Article

Ligand-Enhanced Electron Utilization for Trichloroethylene Degradation by •OH during Sediment Oxygenation

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 10, Pages 7044-7051

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c00136

Keywords

sediment oxygenation; ligands; hydroxyl radicals; trichloroethylene; ferrous iron; electron utilization efficiency

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [42025703, 41521001]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2018YFC1802504]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province, China [2018CFA028]
  4. Program of State Administration of Foreign Experts Affairs & the Ministry of Education of China [B18049]

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Specific ligands can greatly enhance contaminant degradation during sediment oxygenation by increasing the utilization efficiency of sediment electrons. The electron utilization efficiency for (OH)-O-center dot production increases with higher ligand concentrations, and is mainly enhanced by changes in sediment surface Fe(II) coordination for low adsorption affinity ligands, and by electron transfer from sediment to dissolved Fe(III)-ligand for high adsorption affinity ligands.
The potential of oxygenating Fe(II)-bearing sediments for hydroxyl radical ((OH)-O-center dot) production and contaminant degradation has been proposed recently. Here, we further show that specific ligands can largely enhance contaminant degradation during sediment oxygenation due to increased utilization efficiency of sediment electrons. With the addition of 0-2 mM sodium ethylene diamine tetraacetate (EDTA) or sodium tripolyphosphate (TPP) in sediment suspension (50 g/L, pH 7.0), trichloroethylene (TCE, 15 mu M) degradation increased from 13% without ligand to a maximum of 80% with 2 mM TPP and was much higher with TPP than EDTA because EDTA competes for (OH)-O-center dot. Electron utilization efficiency for (OH)-O-center dot production increased with increased ligand concentration and was enhanced by up to 6-7 times with 2 mM EDTA or TPP. Electron transfer from sediment to dissolved Fe(III)-ligand is mainly accountable for the enhanced electron utilization efficiency by the ligands with low adsorption affinity (i.e., EDTA), and additional variation of sediment surface Fe(II) coordination is mainly responsible for the enhancement by the ligands with high adsorption affinity (i.e., TPP). Output of this study provides guidance and optional strategies for enhancing contaminant degradation during sediment oxygenation.

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