4.8 Article

pH-Independent Production of Hydroxyl Radical from Atomic H*-Mediated Electrocatalytic H2O2 Reduction: A Green Fenton Process without Byproducts

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 22, Pages 14725-14731

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c04694

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22022606, 51722811, 51738013, 51978371]
  2. National Water Pollution Control and Treatment Science and Technology Major Project [2018ZX07110007]
  3. Guangxi Bagui Scholar' Construction Project [2016A10]

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Hydroxyl radical ((OH)-O-center dot) can hydroxylate or dehydrogenate organics without forming extra products and is thereby expediently applied in extensive domains. Although it can be efficiently produced through single-electron transfer from transitionmetal-containing activators to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), narrow applicable pH range, strict activator/H2O2 ratio requirement, and byproducts that are formed in the mixture with the background matrix necessitate the need for additional energy-intensive up/ downstream treatments. Here, we show a green Fenton process in an electrochemical cell, where the electro-generated atomic H* on a Pd/graphite cathode enables the efficient conversion of H2O2 into (OH)-O-center dot and subsequent degradation of organic pollutants (80% efficiency). Operando liquid time-of-fight secondary ion mass spectrometry verified that H2O2 activation takes place through a transition state of the Pd-H*-H2O2 adduct with a low reaction energy barrier of 0.92 eV, whereby the lone electron in atomic H* can readily cleave the peroxide bridge, with (OH)-O-center dot and H2O as products (Delta G(r) = -1.344 eV). Using H+ or H2O as the resource, we demonstrate that the well-directed output of H* determines the pH-independent production of (OH)-O-center dot for stable conversion of organic contaminants in wider pH ranges (3-12). The research pioneers a novel path for eliminating the restrictions that are historically challenging in the traditional Fenton process.

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