4.8 Article

Electrochemical Reduction of Halogenated Alkanes and Alkenes Using Activated Carbon-Based Cathodes

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 24, Pages 17965-17976

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c05608

Keywords

electrochemical reduction; halogenated contaminants; structure-activity relationship; activated carbon-based cathode

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  2. UPS Foundation
  3. [DGE - 1656518]

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This study demonstrates that spent GAC can be regenerated through electrochemical reduction, and the degradation rates of halogenated alkanes and alkenes are related to the number of halogens, indicating different reaction mechanisms.
Granular activated carbon (GAC) is used to sorb a broad range of halogenated contaminant classes, but spent GAC disposal is costly. Taking advantage of GAC's conductivity, this study evaluated the conversion of the GAC to cathodes for electrochemical reductive dehalogenation of 15 halogenated alkanes and alkenes exhibiting a diversity of structures (type of halogen, number of halogens, functional groups) and including contaminants of practical importance (e.g., trichloroethylene). Alkane degradation rates increased with the number of halogens and in the order: chlorine < bromine < iodine. Quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSARs) correlating experimental first-order degradation rate constants for alkanes with molecular descriptors associated with an outer-sphere one-electron transfer calculated using density functional theory indicated that correlations with molecular descriptors improved in the order: aqueous phase reduction potentials (E0,aq) < energy of the substrate's lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (ELUMO) < Marcus theory activation free energies (Delta G double dagger) similar to gas-phase standard reduction free energies (Delta G0,gas). Chlorinated alkene degradation rates increased with decreasing number of chlorines, and QSAR correlations were opposite those of alkanes, indicating a different reaction mechanism. Degradation timescales ranged from 1 min to 3 h with halides as predominant products. These results suggest that the electrochemical reduction of halogenated alkanes and alkenes can be used to regenerate spent GAC.

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