4.8 Article

Interlayer Structure Manipulation of Iron Oxychloride by Potassium Cation Intercalation to Steer H2O2 Activation Pathway

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 10, Pages 4294-4299

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c12398

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key Projects for Fundamental Research and Development of China [2019YFC1906700]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21876049, 91834301]

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By simple cation intercalation, the catalytic pathway of iron-based oxidation systems can be altered, leading to enhanced reaction kinetics. This structural regulation technique is of great significance for sustainable pollutant removal technologies.
Structural regulation of the active centers is often pivotal in controlling the catalytic functions, especially in iron-based oxidation systems. Here, we discovered a significantly altered catalytic oxidation pathway via a simple cation intercalation into a layered iron oxychloride (FeOCl) scaffold. Upon intercalation of FeOCl with potassium iodide (KI), a new stable phase of K+-intercalated FeOCl (K-FeOCl) was formed with slided layers, distorted coordination, and formed high-spin Fe(II) species compared to the pristine FeOCl precursor. This structural manipulation steers the catalytic H2O2 activation from a traditional Fenton-like pathway on FeOCl to a nonradical ferryl (Fe(IV)=O) pathway. Consequently, the K-FeOCl catalyst can efficiently remove various organic pollutants with almost 2 orders of magnitude faster reaction kinetics than other Fe-based materials via an oxidative coupling or polymerization pathway. A reaction-filtration coupled process based on K-FeOCl was finally demonstrated and could potentially reduce the energy consumption by almost 50%, holding great promise in sustainable pollutant removal technologies.

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