Journal Pre-proof Electro-oxidation of methyl paraben on DSA®-Cl2: UV irradiation, mechanistic aspects and energy consumption Dawany Dionisio, Lucas H.E. Santos, Manuel A. Rodrigo, Artur J. Motheo PII:
S0013-4686(20)30293-0
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.electacta.2020.135901
Reference:
EA 135901
To appear in:
Electrochimica Acta
Received Date: 2 December 2019 Accepted Date: 12 February 2020
Please cite this article as: D. Dionisio, L.H.E. Santos, M.A. Rodrigo, A.J. Motheo, Electro-oxidation of methyl paraben on DSA®-Cl2: UV irradiation, mechanistic aspects and energy consumption, Electrochimica Acta (2020), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.electacta.2020.135901. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2020 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
1
Electro-oxidation of methyl paraben on DSA®-Cl2: UV
2
irradiation, mechanistic aspects and energy consumption
3
4
Dawany Dionisioa,b, Lucas H. E. Santosa, Manuel A. Rodrigob,
5
Artur J. Motheoa,*
6 7
(a)
8
São Carlos, SP, Brazil
9
(b)
10
São Carlos Institute of Chemistry, University of São Paulo, P.O. Box 780, CEP 13560-970,
Department of Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Chemical Sciences & Technologies,
Universidad de Castilla - La Mancha, Campus Universitario s/n, 13071 Ciudad Real, Spain
11 12 13 14
*Corresponding author
15
Phone: +55 16 33739932
16
E-mail:
[email protected]
17 18
1
19
Abstract
20 21
The electro-oxidation of methylparaben (MeP) was studied using a DSA®-Cl2 in simple
22
electrolysis and hybrid process (electrolysis followed by UV light irradiation), aiming at
23
evaluating the oxidation mechanism, the removal of organic matter and the energy
24
consumption. Analysis of the results revealed that MeP removal is rapid in both processes.
25
However, the formation of a solid byproduct of a polymeric nature, which is probably related
26
to MeP oxidation products, has occurred. Irradiation of UV light in the solution improved the
27
mineralization process by facilitating the degradation of byproducts, including the solid one.
28
Using the hybrid process, mineralization increased by 40% with low additional energy costs.
29
In addition, new aspects about the MeP electrooxidation mechanism were found. The use of
30
the DSA®-Cl2 appears to favor oxidative coupling reactions, resulting in higher molecular
31
weight products prior to aromatic ring breakdown and further mineralization.
32 33 34
Keywords
35
Hybrid process; chloride medium; buffer solution; oxidation pathway; oligomerization.
36
2
37
1
Introduction
38 39
Parabens are part of an important class of preservatives widely used in food, pharmaceutical
40
and cosmetic industries. Darbre et al. [1] reported in 2004 that these compounds are related to
41
human breast cancer, which was restated by Dagher et al. [2] in 2012. Since that, parabens
42
are classified as endocrine disrupting compounds and various studies have been published
43
considering the adverse effects of these substances on the environment and human health [3–
44
9]. According to that, some organizations such as US Food and Drug Administration (FDA),
45
World Health Organization (WHO), European Union (EU), restricted the permitted
46
concentrations of parabens in several products [9,10]. However, due to the high benefit-cost
47
ratio, these preservatives are still largely used, resulting in the contamination of several
48
environmental matrices [11–14].
49
Different types of methods are reported for the removal of organic pollutants, such as
50
parabens, from wastewater. Electrochemical advanced oxidation processes (EAOPs) have
51
showed higher efficacy to achieve complete mineralization and good versatility for
52
technologies coupling [15–20]. Combining other technologies to electrolysis, for instance
53
irradiation of UV light or ultrasound, it is becoming a common strategy to enhance the
54
production of oxidants in the media and, thus, improving the removal of contaminants [21–
55
23]. Nevertheless, the efficiencies of these processes are strongly dependent on the system
56
coupling, the electrodes material and the matrix composition.
57
A few types of electrodes have been used to study the electrochemical oxidation of parabens
58
[15,17,24–30]. However, boron-doped diamond (BDD) anodes are still the most employed,
59
which are very powerful but also expensive. On the other hand, dimensionally stable anodes
60
(DSA®-Cl2) are a commercial type of mixed metal oxides electrode (MMO), which are
61
cheap, robust and very stable. These electrodes are widely used in the chlor-alkali industry
3
62
and several studies reported their good performance for the degradation of pollutants in
63
chloride media [31–36].
64
Both, DSA®-Cl2 and BDD, represent the boundaries in the behavior of electrodes for the
65
electrolysis of organics. In fact, a very important model proposed in the nineties about the
66
mechanisms in the oxidation of organics suggests diamond and mixed metal oxides as
67
examples of active and non-active electrodes [37]. For active electrodes, the formation of
68
hydroxyl radicals by anodic oxidation of water was not as effective as in the case non-active
69
electrodes. This is a consequence of these radicals’ characteristics, which are key to
70
understand the performance of the electrolysis of wastewater. They interact with the metal
71
oxides, leading to the formation of unstable metal oxide species at higher oxidation state, and
72
this unstable oxides becomes the real responsible for the oxidation of organics [38]. This
73
means that the oxidation is really chemical and non radicalary or electrochemical and this
74
explains its softer character. Conversely, in the case of the non-active electrodes, hydroxyl
75
radicals are not combined with the species contained on the surface of the electrode and they
76
attack directly to the organic pollutants in a hasher way [39]. In addition, from the beginning
77
of the research studies focused on the treatment of wastewater [40–43], the significance of
78
mediated oxidation has been pointed out, in particular in the presence of chlorides. These
79
anions allows the formation of chlorine and other oxidants [44–46], which does not always
80
have a positive impact on the treatment because of the reported formation of hazardous
81
byproducts. At this point, key differences between the mechanisms involved in the oxidation
82
of organics using active and non-active electrodes are not related to the oxidative reactions
83
but to the significance of the progress in each of them. Thus, in non-active electrodes,
84
combination of intermediates for form polymers is not promoted and carboxylic acids are
85
easily degraded [47]. Conversely, in active electrodes, with the same oxidation routes,
86
accumulation of carboxylic acid is typically found, because of the difficulties found in the
4
87
chemical oxidation of these highly oxidized organic molecules. In addition, stability of
88
polymers is much higher than that of the parent molecules and because of that they remain in
89
the treated solution, sometimes fouling the electrode surface and leading to important
90
inefficiencies [48].
91
It is possible to find several mechanistic proposals of parabens oxidation using either
92
electrochemical or non-electrochemical processes [15,18,20,28,49–53]. However, to the best
93
knowledge of the authors, for the electrooxidation process, all-mechanistic considerations are
94
proposed using BDD anodes, i.e., there is a lack of information on the use of MMO as
95
anodes, specifically for this system. According to this, the aim of the present study was to
96
analyze the electrooxidation mechanism of methyl paraben (MeP) using a DSA®-Cl2, in order
97
to verify the feasibility of this technology for the removal of parabens from wastewaters. A
98
hybrid process with irradiation of UV light during electrolysis was also considered, focusing
99
on the removal of organic matter and energy consumption.
100 101
2
Experimental
102 103
Chemicals. Methyl paraben was obtained from Sigma-Aldrich. NaCl (Synth) and H2SO4
104
(PanReac) were used as supporting electrolyte and for pH adjustment. Monochloroacetic acid
105
(AnalytiCals) was used to prepare a buffer solution with pH = 3 (named monochloroacetate
106
buffer, BMCAc). Acetonitrile and methanol, HPLC grade were obtained from PanReac. All
107
reactants were used as received. High-purity water obtained from a Millipore Milli-Q system
108
(resistivity >18M cm at 25 ºC) was used for the preparation of all solutions.
109 110
Electrochemical treatments. Experiments were carried out in a recirculation batch system
111
(see Fig. S1a) constituted of an electrochemical cell with 1.0 L of working solution, a
5
112
jacketed reservoir with 0.7 L of solution and a circulator pump working at 5.0 mL s-1 flow
113
rate. A commercial DSA® of Ti/Ru0,3Ti0,7O2 (purchased from DeNora do Brasil) was used as
114
anode and a Ti plate as cathode, both with 54.4 cm2 and separated by 5 cm in the cell.
115
Solutions of MeP (100 mg L-1, pH = 3.0) + NaCl (0.15 mol L-1) were treated by 2 hours
116
electrolysis using an Autolab PGSTAT 128N (Metrohm B.V.). For UV light irradiation, a
117
germicidal UVC lamp (4 W, λ = 254 nm, Philips) was introduced into a quartz tube and
118
centralized inside the reservoir (see Fig. S1b). For the study of pH using buffer solution,
119
experiments were carried out in a simpler system based on the previous one (see Fig. S1c).
120
The reservoir of the other system was used now as electrochemical cell to treat 0.6 L of
121
solution, without recirculation, using the same electrodes as before. Monochloroacetic
122
acid/chloroacetate (0.1 mol L-1, BMCAc) was added to the solution MeP + NaCl in order to
123
maintain its pH at 3 during the 2 hours electrolysis.
124 125
Determination of MeP, BMCAc and TOC. Concentration of methyl paraben was monitored in a
126
HPLC Shimadzu SPD-10A VP, with a Zorbax SB-C18 (25 cm x 4.6 mm) column and UV
127
detector set in 254 nm. Acetonitrile and water (40:60 v/v) were used as mobile phase, at 30
128
ºC and flow rate of 1 mL min-1. Monochloroacetic acid was also monitored in this system but
129
using a Aminex HPX-87H (Bio-Rad) column (at 25 ºC) and H2SO4 0.005 mol L-1 as mobile
130
phase (1 mL min-1), with detection in 214 nm. Total organic carbon (TOC) was determined in
131
a carbon analyzer Sievers InnovOx, General Electric Company (FAPESP 2014/02739-6).
132 133
Byproducts analysis. For solid product analysis, 1.7 L of treated solution were centrifuged in
134
an Himac CR 2OB2 centrifuge (Hitachi) at 8000 rpm during 15 min. Precipitate was dried for
135
12 hours in a vacuum oven (Precision model 19) at 60 ºC. The solid was analyzed by infrared
136
spectrophotometry (Shimadzu IRAffinity) in KBr pellets. Cyclic voltammetry was performed
6
137
with an Autolab PGSTAT 128N (Metrohm B.V.), using the same anode and cathode as in
138
electrolysis and an Ag/AgCl reference electrode. A cathodic sweep was carried out at 50 mV
139
s-1 ranging from -1.3 to -0.3 V. Aromatic byproducts were extracted and concentrated by
140
solid phase extraction (SPE) using C18ec cartridges (1 mL/ 100 mg, Chromabond®,
141
Macherey-Nagel) and methanol as eluent. These samples were analyzed by HPLC-MS in a
142
Shimadzu Prominence 20A series chromatographer with Zorbax SB-C18 (25 cm x 4.6 mm)
143
column, at 40 ºC, with H2O:ACN (60:40, v/v) acidified by 0.1% formic acid as mobile phase
144
(1.0 mL min-1) coupled to a hybrid mass spectrometer quadrupole/TOF with electrospray
145
ionization (Microtof-QII, Bruker Daltonics) (FAPESP 2004/09498-2).
146 147
3
Results and Discussion
148
3.1
Effect of current density
149
Fig. 1 shows the removals of MeP (MePR) by electrochemical treatment at current densities
150
(japp) ranging from 1.0 to 10.0 mA cm-2, which are equivalent to maximum electrical charges
151
(Q) of 0.06 to 0.64 A h L-1, respectively. As expected, the higher the japp, the higher the
152
removal of the pollutant: MePR of 29 and 76% were obtained for japp = 1.0 and 2.5 mA cm-2,
153
respectively, whereas for higher japp, complete removal was achieved with 80 and 40 min of
154
treatment for 5.0 and 10 mA cm-2 (Tab. 1). In the studied system, chloride is oxidized to
155
chlorine gas (Eq. 1) on the DSA®-Cl2 surface; dissolved Cl2 is hydrolyzed forming
156
hypochlorous acid (Eq. 2), which further dissociates to hypochlorite (Eq. 3) depending on
157
the solution pH (pKa (HClO) = 7.5)[54,55].
158
2 Cl− → Cl2 + 2 e−
(1)
159
Cl2 + H2O ⇌ HClO + Cl− + H+
(2)
160
HClO ⇌ ClO− + H+
(3)
7
161
Hydroxyl radicals are also produced in the system from water electrolysis (Eq. 4), however,
162
they are strongly adsorbed on DSA®-Cl2 surface and will only oxidize species near to this
163
interface [56]. The main species on this region are chloride anions and, thus, the main ●OH
164
reaction might be the formation of Cl● radicals (Eq. 5) [57]. On the other hand, due to its
165
higher stability, active chlorine species (Cl2, HClO, ClO−) will be present in the whole
166
volume of working solution and, therefore, will be the mainly responsible for the indirect
167
oxidation of methyl paraben. Accordingly, as the japp increases, MeP is converted to other
168
compounds at higher rates, due to the higher production of active chlorine species. In the
169
present work, the quantitative determination of free chlorine was not made; however,
170
numerous works report that the degradation of organics increases with the increase of Cl−
171
concentration in the medium and the increase of the applied current density (when using
172
DSA®-Cl2) [58–60].
173
H2O → H+ + ●OH + e−
(4)
174
Cl− + ●OH + H+ → Cl● + H2O
(5)
175
At higher japp values, it is noticeable that for each value of applied electrical charge the same
176
MePR is attained, which indicates that the removal process is limited by mass transfer
177
[61,62]. This limitation can be a result of the transport of Cl- to the anode surface, controlling
178
the oxidants electrogeneration, and the transport of oxidants from the anode to the bulk
179
solution and vice versa, limiting the oxidation of MeP. On the other hand, for japp < 5.0 mA
180
cm-2, charge transfer is facilitated on the electrode surface, nonetheless a small concentration
181
of chlorine is electrogenerated, resulting in low MeP conversion.
182
The elimination of organic matter was evaluated by TOC removal (TOCR), which is
183
presented in Tab. 1. Those removals seem to be enhanced by higher japp values, however for
184
5.0 and 10.0 mA cm-2 similar TOCR is observed, because some products of MeP degradation
185
may be more recalcitrant than MeP itself. Usually, short-chain carboxylic acids and
8
186
organochlorine compounds are found as byproducts of oxidation processes, since they are
187
highly oxidized and recalcitrant molecules [63,64].
188
From TOC results, it is also possible to determine the mineralization current efficiency of the
189
process (MCE), which is indicative of how efficiently the applied electrical charge promotes
190
TOC removal. MCE can be calculated by Eq. 6 [65], where TOCi and TOCf refer to the
191
initial and final concentrations of organic carbon (mg C L-1), respectively, F is the Faraday
192
constant (96,485 C mol-1), V is the volume of working solution (L), I is the applied current
193
(A), t is time (h), n is the number of electrons exchanged in the mineralization process of the
194
organic compound, m is the number of carbon atoms of the molecule under study, and
195
4.32×107 is the conversion factor for units homogenization (3,600 s h-1 × 12,000 mg C mol-1).
196
Tab. 1 shows that MCE sharply decreased for japp > 2.5 mA cm-2, since increasing current
197
densities did not result in increasing TOCR. Consequently, optimal MCE was observed at japp
198
= 2.5 mA cm-2 although this current density did not provide the highest TOCR. This behavior
199
is related to the occurrence of competitive reactions (i.e. oxygen evolution reaction) and other
200
oxidation processes that do not lead to mineralization (i.e. production of highly oxidized,
201
recalcitrant byproducts).
202
% =
203
It is worth noting that the persistence of byproducts observed for high current densities could
204
also be related to medium composition in terms of oxidizing species. For japp > 5.0 mA cm-2,
205
the final pH of the wastewater was shifted from 3.0 to 7.0 - 8.0. At those final pH values, the
206
ratio [ClO−]/[HClO] is higher than at the initial pH. Since ClO− is a weaker oxidant than
207
HClO (E0 = 0.89 and 1.49 V, respectively [58]), mineralization is possibly impaired in spite
208
of the high concentration of oxidizing species. Nevertheless, the low TOCR and MCE
... .× ...
. 100
(6)
9
209
observed at 1.0 mA cm-2 is most likely related to the low production of oxidizing species than
210
to their relative concentration, since the pH increase was too small in this case (0.3 pH units).
211 212
3.2
Effect of UV light irradiation on electrolysis
213 214
A germicide lamp (λ = 254 nm) was coupled to the solution tank in order to improve organic
215
matter removal by means of the UV/Cl2 process. Irradiation of UV light into the solution may
216
contribute to the removal of organic matter by producing highly oxidizing species (such as
217
●
218
Fig. 2 shows the kinetics for the removal of MeP by electrochemical process single (E) and
219
coupled to UV/Cl2 (E-P). Photolysis of MeP in Cl- medium (inset of Fig. 2) was not efficient
220
since MePR was 17% and almost no TOC removal was observed after 2h. On the other hand,
221
when photolysis is coupled to electrolysis, MeP is completely removed from the solution at
222
japp = 5.0-10.0 mA cm-2. However, no improvement was observed for the E-P process in
223
comparison to single electrolysis. It is possible to observe a pseudo-first order kinetic for
224
MePR by the electrolytic processes, which the kinetic constants (k) are presented in Tab. 1 (E
225
process) and Tab. 2 (E-P process). For japp = 5.0 mA cm-2, two different kinetic regions can
226
be observed because indirect oxidation is facilitated by low pollutant concentration. As the
227
process advances, the abatement of MeP changes its behavior because of the lower MeP
228
concentration in the medium. Even though, the reaction still follows pseudo-first order model
229
but with a different kinetic coefficient, thus, it is observed k1 and k2 for each regime,
230
respectively [66]. When lower japp values were applied, this behavior was not observed
231
because the lower removal of MeP. This effect was also observed on previous studies of MeP
232
degradation using boron doped diamond (BDD) anodes [26,67].
OH and Cl●) and degrading photosensitive molecules.
10
233
Differently from MeP removal, Tab. 2 shows that the removal of organic matter was
234
enhanced by the irradiation of UV light. It is possible to observe an increase on TOCR up to
235
55% with relation to single electrolysis (Tab. 1). Active chlorine species are produced by the
236
electrochemical process, and under UV irradiation they can be activated to even more power
237
oxidizing species, such as ●OH and Cl● (Eqs. 7-9). As it was mentioned before, these species
238
will also be formed near to the anode surface. However, the irradiation of UV light promotes
239
the activation effect at the whole volume of solution, which facilitates the mass transport of
240
the system and, thus, the removal of contaminants.
241
HOCl + hν → ●OH + Cl●
(7)
242
ClO− + hν → O−● +Cl●
(8)
243
O−● + H2O → ●OH + OH−
(9)
244
Considering that some byproducts may be organochlorinated compounds, TOCR may also be
245
improved under UV irradiation due to the rupture of C-Cl bonds [68]. Once higher japp
246
represent higher concentrations of byproducts, the UV effect on electrolysis was major for
247
10.0 mA cm-2. Because of better TOC removals, the MCE is also improved, in which 71% of
248
efficiency was achieved for 5.0 mA cm-2.
249
In order to evaluate the coupling of processes from an energetic point of view, the synergistic
250
index (SI) was correlated with the energy consumption (EC) for TOC removal (Fig. 3). The
251
SI is used to evaluate the effect of the combination of different processes and, in this case,
252
was calculated specifically for TOC removal, according to Eq. 10, where TOCR,E-P, TOCR,E
253
and TOCR,P are the removals of TOC (%) for the coupled process (E-P) and the individual
254
processes E and P, respectively. The energy consumption of the processes per unit of TOC
255
mass was estimated by Eq. 11 (adapted from Martínez-Huitle, et al. [69]), where U is the cell
256
voltage (V), I is the applied current (A), t is time (h), Wlamp is the UV lamp consumption (V),
257
V is volume of working solution (L) and ∆TOC is the experimental TOC decay (in mg L-1). 11
$,&'(
258
"# =
259
*+ ℎ -./ =
260
According to the correlation presented in Fig. 3, the higher the SI, the lower is the energy
261
required for removing 1 g of TOC from the working solution and, hence, the higher is the
262
efficiency of the process. An antagonistic effect can be observed for low values of japp due to
263
the low TOCR obtained under those conditions. This result can be explained by the greater
264
effect of UV light on the degradation byproducts than on the MeP, as the results of Tab. 2
265
suggest. On the other hand, for higher current values the efficiency of E-P is improved: at 10
266
mA cm-2 the coupling enhances the individual process by almost 40% (SI = 1.38), and the EC
267
is only 1.4 times higher than the single electrolysis. Under this condition, the extra energy
268
required for the use of UV lamp is counterweighed by the better mineralization removal.
269
Depending on the aim of the treatment, the hybrid process might be more interesting for
270
application, even if the EC is slightly higher. The different MCE results obtained for each
271
treatment (Tabs. 1 and 2) indicate that the composition of the treated solutions is different.
272
Hence, chemical oxygen demand (COD) and toxicity might also be different, which are
273
important parameters to consider for an effluent disposal.
(10)
$,& ) $,( 0.. ) 12345 . .∆
(11)
274 275
3.3
Identification of byproducts
276
3.3.1 Solid product
277
By the end of the degradations, with both E and E-P processes, the initially clear solutions
278
became turbid because of the presence of a yellow, suspended solid; some foam was also
279
formed on the surface of the solution. Higher accumulation of the solid is obtained for lower
280
electrical charges after 2 hours of E process (see Fig. S2). The increase of Q resulted in less
281
turbid solutions, which means that those byproducts can be degraded by the electrochemical
12
282
process. The suspended solid produced during E process (Q = 0.45 A h L-1) was separated
283
from the solution by centrifugation and analyzed by infrared (IR) spectroscopy.
284
IR spectrum of the solid is presented in Fig. 4a and interpreted as follows [70]. The peaks at
285
1462 cm-1 and 849 cm-1, and the shoulder at 1120 cm-1 (all identified by squares) are
286
attributed to 1,4- and 1,2,4-substituted aromatic rings. The peaks between 1740 cm-1 and
287
1540 cm-1 (circles) account for the presence of carboxylic acids (aliphatic and aromatic), and
288
carboxylate salts. The peaks at 3462 cm-1, with shoulders at 3262 cm-1 and 3050 cm-1, and
289
around 1362 cm-1 (triangles) are related to carboxylic and phenolic OH groups. The shoulders
290
at 1060 cm-1 and 1038 cm-1 (diamonds) are assigned to aryl chlorides. According to that, the
291
solid byproduct seems to consist of chlorinated degradation products of MeP.
292
It was further noticed that the solid is formed on the cathode surface since a strong, yellow
293
color is observed around this electrode during the first minutes of the degradations. Hence,
294
the cathode was studied by cyclic voltammetry (Fig. 4b) in the degradation medium, after 0,
295
10 and 20 minutes of applied current (5.0 mA cm-2). A redox process occurs on the cathode
296
and its intensity increases as the degradation proceeds. It is possible that MeP oxidation
297
products, formed at the solution bulk, are reduced on the cathode. When phenolic compounds
298
and their oxidized counterparts are present in the same solution, they can undergo
299
polymerization reactions [71,72]. Therefore, it is possible that the yellow solid observed is a
300
polymerization product, most likely oligomers, of some intermediates of MeP degradation.
301
Also, in this case, the relatively high molecular weight of those oligomers would cause their
302
insolubility in an aqueous medium. In order to diminish this effect studies can be carried out
303
in a divided cell, preventing that the oxidation product of MeP reaches the cathodic region.
304
However, it is important to consider that for some wastewater types divided cells present
305
lower efficiency due to mass transfer problems.
13
306
As mentioned before, pH has an important effect on the active chlorine species and, thus, on
307
the oxidant power of the medium. In this work, when a non-buffered solution was used, it
308
was observed an increase of the solution pH (from 3 to 8 after 4 h), which indicates
309
alkalinizing and loss of oxidant power (because the ratio [ClO-]/[HClO] increases with
310
increasing pH, and ClO- is a weaker oxidizing agent than HClO). Considering that, several
311
experiments were carried out using a buffer (BMCAc) to maintain the pH and the ratio [ClO-
312
]/[HClO] constant during the process. Solution of MeP (100 mg L-1) + NaCl (0.15 mol L-1)
313
was treated by electrochemical process for 2 h and compared to the degradation of the
314
buffered solution (monochloroacetic acid/chloroacetate (0.1 mol L-1) + MeP + NaCl).
315
Initially, the monochloroacetic acid (MCAA) was treated in NaCl medium in order to
316
observe the efficacy of electrochemical process, with DSA®-Cl2, to remove it from water. It
317
can be observed by the inset of Fig. 5a that this process is not efficient to remove MCAA
318
under the studied conditions, resulting in a small variation of 5% on its concentration. After
319
80 min there is a slight increase on the concentration, which can be attributed to intrinsic
320
errors in the method. Therefore, this acid is considered stable and feasible to be used as
321
buffer solution (BMCAc) on MeP degradation, since it will not compete with MeP oxidation
322
under the conditions used.
323
Fig. 5a shows the removal of MeP in non-buffered (NaCl) and buffered (NaCl + BMCAc)
324
media. No difference was observed for the removal of MeP, achieving complete its removal
325
after 80 min of treatment. This means that pH does not affect MeP oxidation. However, in
326
Fig. 5b it is possible to observe that TOC removal is favored by the buffered medium, as well
327
as the values of MCE and the EC. Hence, the removal of byproducts is affected by pH,
328
presenting better efficiency at acidic conditions. Several electro-oxidation studies [18–23]
329
have shown that degradation of organic compounds are facilitated by acidic and oxidant
330
conditions, because reaction steps, as decarboxylation and aromatic ring opening, require
14
331
such conditions. As a result of the constant ratio [ClO-]/[HClO] during the electrolysis, it was
332
observed a improve of 40% in TOCR and of 67% in MCE, with almost half of the energy
333
consumed, because alkalinizing and loss of oxidizing power did not take place.
334
Furthermore, regarding the solid product formation it was observed that in the presence of
335
BMCAc the final solution was more clear than for the non-buffered solution (see Fig. S3) and
336
did not present formation of foam. Also, in comparison with Fig. S2, it can be seen that the
337
aspect of the final solution using BMCA and 0.45 A h L-1 is similar to that obtained with non-
338
buffered medium and 3.63 A h L-1, which is 8 times more applied charge. It is interesting to
339
note that during the experiments in buffered medium, the solution turbidity increased in a
340
first moment followed by its decrease. This effect indicates that the solid product was formed
341
and degraded by the electrochemical process and it reinforces that the buffered medium
342
improves the byproducts oxidation.
343 344
3.3.2 Mechanistical proposal
345
A 4 h electrolysis using japp = 15 mA cm-2 was performed in order to achieve higher organic
346
matter removal. MeP was completely removed after 40 min of treatment; however, the
347
mineralization was not improved. A plateau at 36% of TOCR is reached after the first hour of
348
electrolysis. As a result, low MCE (11%) and high EC for TOC removal (0.64 kW h gTOC-1)
349
were observed.
350
During this electrolysis, samples for liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry
351
(LC-MS) were collected every hour for the investigation of the mechanism of MeP electro-
352
oxidation on DSA®-Cl2. Only MeP was detected in the initial solution (t = 0 h) and no
353
compound was detected for t = 4 h, which indicates that aromatic substances were completely
354
removed after that time. Six main intermediates were detected (those with more intense peaks
355
in the mass spectra) and identified (Fig. 6). The compounds named as 1 to 4 were identified
15
356
from the mass spectrum for t = 1 h. After 2 h of electrolysis, the compound 4 remains in
357
solution and a new compound, 5, was detected. For t = 3 h, only 4 was detected and
358
completely removed within the next hour.
359
Compounds 1 to 4 (m/z = 267, 221, 301 and 255, respectively) have higher molecular weight
360
than MeP (152.15 u), which is only possible if MeP molecules react toward other species by
361
addition or similar reactions. By a retrosynthesis approach, it is possible to suggest that
362
compounds 1 and 2 are formed from compounds A and B, after a sequence of hydrolysis,
363
hydroxylation and decarboxylation steps (see Fig. S3a - S3b). Compounds A and B were not
364
detected, however, retrosynthetic analysis shows that A may be formed by the oxidative
365
coupling of two molecules of C, whereas B may be formed by the oxidative coupling of C
366
and D. Those compounds derive from E and F, respectively, which correspond to hydrolysis
367
and oxidation products of MeP and are very likely to be formed in this medium.
368
It is known that oxidizing conditions, in a wide range of pH values, may lead to oligo- and
369
even polymerization of phenolic compounds [73,74]. Dimers, trimers and tetramers may be
370
the main products in mildly acid and mildly oxidizing conditions [75]. As mentioned before,
371
in this work, when a non-buffered solution was used, it was observed an increase of the
372
solution pH (from 3 to 8 after 4 h), which indicates both alkalinizing and loss of oxidant
373
power. Therefore, oxidative coupling steps involving compounds C and D are likely to
374
happen in the studied conditions.
375
A similar retrosynthesis logic can be used for compounds 3 and 4 (see Fig. S3c - S3d). It can
376
be suggested that compound G is as a common precursor, which is possibly formed by the
377
oxidative coupling of H and C. Compound H can be formed by chlorination of D or derive
378
from I, which is a chlorination product of F. Finally, it is suggested that compound 5 derives
379
from compounds 1 and/or 2, after hydrolysis and decarboxylation steps (see Fig. S3e).
16
380
Compounds C, D, E, F, and other similar products, were detected by Rosales et al. [28] for
381
MeP degradation using BDD anode and an iron-carbonaceous cathode for electro-Fenton
382
process. Steter et al. [18,20] have also detected compounds D, F, and other similar products,
383
during the first stages of MeP oxidation, on BDD anode, in sulfate and chloride media.
384
Moreover, compounds similar to H and I were also found by Steter et al. [20] in their study
385
on the electro-oxidation of MeP on different anodes and different media. However, oxidative
386
coupling products were not observed by those authors [18,20,28]. These studies report that
387
MeP degradation mechanism follows few decarboxylation steps until the formation of
388
hydroquinone and the further rupture of the aromatic ring. In the presence of chloride, a
389
similar mechanism was observed, though with formation of several polychlorinated phenols
390
and chlorinated aliphatic carboxylic acids [20]. On the other hand, Frontistis et al. [15,52]
391
observed the formation of oxidative coupling products on the treatments of ethyl paraben by
392
electrochemical process with a BDD anode and by heat-activated persulfate oxidation. In
393
both studies, it is reported the formation of several oligomers either using persulfate or
394
chloride media. The oligomers were identified by LC-TOF-MS as dimers and trimers of ethyl
395
paraben and its chlorination products.
396
According to the intermediates identified by MS, the retrosynthetic analysis and the
397
literature, a possible mechanistic route for MeP oxidation is proposed as shown in Fig. 6.
398
First, MeP originates its precursor, 4-hydroxybenzoic acid (F) by nucleophilic addition and
399
releasing of a -OCH3 group. F can undergo addition of a -OH or a -Cl group, forming
400
compounds E and I. Those three compounds combine and form more complex molecules,
401
which happen by oxidative coupling at the position 2 of the aromatic ring, and three main
402
pathways are suggested:
403
• Two molecules of C react and form intermediate A, which further reacts to form product 1
404
(m/z = 267);
17
405 406 407 408
• C and D react and form intermediate B, which further reacts to form product 2 (m/z = 221); • H and C react and form intermediate E, which further reacts to form products 3 (m/z = 301) and 4 (m/z = 255).
409
Product 1 is likely formed by hydrolysis of intermediate A, whereas 3 are likely formed by
410
hydroxylation and hydrolysis of G. Products 2 and 4 are possibly formed from intermediates
411
B and G, respectively, by hydrolysis, aromatic ring opening, decarboxylation and cyclizing
412
steps. Product 5 is formed from products 1 and 2 by similar reaction pathways. Therefore,
413
products 3, 4 and 5 are the main last aromatic compounds that remain in the medium before
414
all aromatic rings are open and produce aliphatic structures.
415
It is worth noting that in the present study only aromatic compounds were determined by LC-
416
MS. Compounds 1 to 5 are expected to be relatively stable, even in the presence of oxidants,
417
because of the conjugation between double bonds and non-bonding electron pairs. This is one
418
reason why those compounds would last long enough to be isolated and detected. Even
419
though, all aromatic compounds were completed removed after 4 h of electrochemical
420
treatment. After the opening of aromatic rings, aliphatic compounds are expected to be
421
formed (including chlorinated carboxylic acids) [18,20,64,76,77]. In fact, aromatic pollutants
422
always follow the formation of aromatic intermediates (which can couple and form polymer)
423
and the ring opening to form carboxylic acids [41,44,47,64,78,79], which in case of using
424
active electrodes are more difficult to be removed than aromatic and they accumulate in the
425
electrolyte [21,54]. The nature of the carboxylic acids formed is very well known since the
426
turn of the century, consisting mainly in oxalic acid, which is very slowly mineralized.
427
Despite the mechanistic complications, it was observed that part of the aliphatic byproducts
428
was oxidized and mineralized to CO2, H2O e Cl−, since 36% of the TOC was removed from
429
the medium.
18
430 431
4
Conclusions
432 433
From the results presented, the following conclusions can be drawn:
434
• Methyl paraben can be removed from the aqueous medium containing chloride anion by
435
the electrochemical process using the DSA®-Cl2, mainly by mediated oxidation.
436
• Irradiation of UV light facilitates the removal of byproducts, but not of MeP itself. Thus,
437
the synergism was better for higher japp values. Mineralization can be increased by 40%
438
with low additional energy costs.
439
• The degradation process resulted in the formation of a solid byproduct, which probably
440
derives from the oxidation of MeP products and is of polymeric nature. However, the
441
electrolysis itself seems to be effective to remove this product.
442
• MeP oxidation initially happens through the chlorination and hydroxylation of 4-
443
hydroxybenzoic acid. Those compounds undergo oxidative coupling reactions to form
444
higher molecular weight products before the aromatic ring breakdown. Thereafter, several
445
aliphatic acids (including their chlorination products) are expected to be formed as the last
446
byproducts prior to mineralization.
447 448
Acknowledgements
449 450
Financial support from the Brazilian Federal Agency for the Support and Improvement of
451
Higher Education (CAPES), São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP, Brazil) [2016/19662-
452
1, 2016/04825-2, 2017/10118-0 and 2017/20444-1], National Council for Scientific and
453
Technological Development (CNPq, Brazil) [140669/2014-0] and from the Spanish Ministry
454
of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness, European Union through project CTM2016-
19
455
76197-R (AEI/FEDER, UE) are gratefully acknowledged. Authors are also thankful to Prof.
456
Antonio C. B. Burtoloso for the discussion about the final mechanistic proposal.
457 458 459
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721
Table 1 Kinetic constant, MeP and TOC removals, and mineralization current efficiency for the
722
single electrochemical process (E) at different current densities. DSA®-Cl2 in NaCl 0.15 mol L-1 at 25
723
°C
MePR (%)
TOCR (%)
MCE (%)
1.0
kE (10 min-1) 2.5
29 (120 min)
3.0
28
2.5
12
76 (120 min)
17
59
5.0
35*
100 (80 min)
29
50
10.0
**
100 (40 min)
27
24
japp (mA cm-2)
-3
724
* Value calculated for the first kinetic region (k1); k2 was not determined due to the lack of values measured.
725
** Kinetic constant could not be determined due to the fast MeP abatement.
726 727
Table 2 Kinetic constant, MeP and TOC removals, and mineralization current efficiency for
728
electrochemical process with UV irradiation (E-P). DSA®-Cl2 in NaCl 0.15 mol L-1 at 25 °C; UVC
729
lamp (λ = 254 nm, 4W)
MePR (%)
TOCR (%)
MCE (%)
1.0
kE-P (10 min-1) 2.9
31
4.4
42
2.5
12
78
16
61
5.0
33*
100
38
71
10.0
**
100
42
38
japp (mA cm-2)
-3
730
* Value calculated for the first kinetic region (k1); k2 was not determined due to the lack of values measured.
731
** Kinetic constant could not be determined due to the fast MeP abatement.
732
29
733
Figure 1 Electrochemical removal of MeP (100 mg L-1) at different current densities as a function of
734
the instant applied charge. japp = () 1.0, ( ) 2.5, (∆) 5.0, (◆) 10 mA cm-2. DSA®-Cl2 in NaCl 0.15
735
mol L-1 at 25 °C.
736
30
737
Figure 2 Kinetic of MeP (100 mg L-1) removal by electrochemical processes (black symbols) single
738
and (white symbols) with UV irradiation. japp = (●) 1.0, ( ) 2.5, (▲) 5.0 mA cm-2. Inset: Removal of
739
MeP (100 mg L-1) by photolysis in chloride medium. DSA®-Cl2 in NaCl 0.15 mol L-1 at 25 °C; UVC
740
lamp (λ = 254 nm, 4W).
741
742
31
743
Figure 3 Energy consumption of the electrochemical processes (black bars) single and (gray bars)
744
with UV irradiation, and ( ) synergistic index of the coupled process. DSA®-Cl2, [MeP] = 100 mg L-1
745
in NaCl 0.15 mol L-1 at 25 °C; UVC lamp (λ = 254 nm, 4W).
746
747 748
32
749
Figure 4 (a) IR spectrum of the yellow, solid byproduct, obtained in KBr pellet. (b) Cyclic
750
voltammograms of the Ti cathode in 0.15 mol L-1 NaCl + 100 mg L-1 MeP (100 mg L-1) solution, scan
751
rate: 50 mV s-1, after 0, 10 and 20 min of degradation (japp = 5.0 mA cm-2).
752
753
33
754
Figure 5 Comparison of MeP degradation by electrochemical process in non-buffered (NaCl 0.15 mol
755
L-1) and in buffered (NaCl 0.15 mol L-1 + BMCAc 0.1 mol L-1) media with japp = 2.5 mA cm-2 at 25 ºC.
756
(a) Removal of MeP (black symbols) without and (white symbols) with BMCAc; (b) removal of TOC,
757
MCE and EC obtained (black bars) without and (gray bars) with BMCAc. Inset: Removal of
758
monochloroacetic acid (0.1 mol L-1) by electrochemical process in NaCl medium (0.15 mol L-1).
759
760 761 762
34
763
Figure 6 Mechanistic proposal for the electrochemical degradation of MeP (100 mg L-1, 4 h
764
treatment) on DSA®-Cl2. japp = 15 mA cm-2, NaCl 0.15 mol L-1, 25 ºC.
765
766
35
Declaration of interests ☒ The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. ☐The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: