4.6 Article

The Role of Sulphate and Phosphate Ions in the Recovery of Benzoic Acid Self-Enhanced Ozonation in Water Containing Bromides

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26092701

Keywords

ozonation; bromides; sulphate; phosphates; radicals; advanced oxidation processes

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Ozonation of aromatic compounds in low-pH water is ineffective due to limited decomposition of ozone and inhibition by halogen ions. However, the presence of bromides can initiate self-enhanced ozonation, which can be inhibited by phosphates or sulphates. The addition of these inorganic salts helps recover ozone decomposition and degradation efficiency of benzoic acid.
The ozonation of aromatic compounds in low-pH water is ineffective. In an acidic environment, the decomposition of ozone into hydroxyl radicals is limited and insufficient for the degradation of organic pollutants. Radical processes are also strongly inhibited by halogen ions present in the reaction medium, especially at low pH. It was shown that even under such unfavorable conditions, some compounds can initiate radical chain reactions leading to the formation of hydroxyl radicals, thus accelerating the ozonation process, which is referred to as so-called self-enhanced ozonation. This paper presents the effect of bromides on self-enhanced ozonation of benzoic acid (BA) at pH 2.5. It is the first report to fully and quantitatively describe this process. The presence of only 15 mu M bromides in water inhibits ozone decomposition and completely blocks BA degradation. However, the effectiveness of this process can be regained by ozonation in the presence of phosphates or sulphate. The addition of these inorganic salts to the bromide-containing solution helps to recover ozone decomposition and BA degradation efficiency. As part of this research, the fractions of hydroxyl, sulphate and phosphate radicals reacting with benzoic acid and bromides were calculated.

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