4.8 Article

Accelerating FeIII-Aqua Complex Reduction in an Efficient Solid-Liquid-Interfacial Fenton Reaction over the Mn-CNH Co-catalyst at Near-Neutral pH

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 19, Pages 13326-13334

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c04534

Keywords

interfacial Fenton; Fe-III/Fe-II circulation; single-atom co-catalyst; electron transfer; near-neutral pH

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22076082, 21874099, 22006029]
  2. Tianjin Commission of Science and Technology as key technologies RD projects [19YFZCSF00740, 20YFZCSN01070]
  3. Frontiers Science Center for New Organic Matter [63181206]

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The use of Mn-CNH co-catalyst in constructing a solid-liquid interfacial Fenton reaction has shown promising results in efficiently removing pollutants at lower pH levels. This method accelerates the Fe-III/Fe-II redox cycle, achieving high regeneration rate of FeII and significantly improving pollutant degradation efficiency.
The sluggish regeneration rate of FeII and low operating pH still restrict the wider application of classical Fenton process (Fe-II/H2O2) for practical water treatment. To overcome these challenges, we exploit the Mn-CNH co-catalyst to construct a solid-liquid interfacial Fenton reaction and accelerate the Fe-III/Fe-II redox cycle at the interface for sustainably generating center dot OH from H2O2 activation. The Mn-CNH co-catalyst exhibits an excellent regeneration rate of FeII (similar to 65%) and a high tetracycline removal rate (K-obs) of 0.0541 min(-1), which is 19.0 times higher than that of the Fe-II/H2O2 system (0.0027 min(-1)) at a near-neutral pH (pH approximate to 5.8), and it also attains 100% degradation of sulfamethoxazole, rhodamine B, and methyl orange. The cyclic mechanism of Fe-III/Fe-II is further elucidated in an atomic scale by combining characterizations and density functional theory calculations, including Fe-aq(III) specific adsorption and the electron-transfer process. Mn active sites can accumulate electrons from the matrix and adsorb Fe-aq(III) to form Mn-Fe bonds at the solid-liquid interface, which accelerate electron transfer from Mn-CNH to Fe-aq(III) and promote the regeneration of Fe-II at a wide pH range with a lower energy barrier. The regeneration rate of Fe-II in the Mn-CNH/Fe-II/H2O2 system outperforms the benchmark Fenton system and other typical metal nanomaterials, which has great potential to be widely applied in actual environment remediation.

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