Journal Pre-proof Removal of triphenyl phosphate by nanoscale zerovalent iron (nZVI) activated bisulfite: Performance, surface reaction mechanism and sulfate radical-mediated degradation pathway Ruxia Chen, Hua Yin, Hui Peng, Xipeng Wei, Xiaolong Yu, Danping Xie, Guining Lu, Zhi Dang PII:
S0269-7491(19)36861-7
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2020.113983
Reference:
ENPO 113983
To appear in:
Environmental Pollution
Received Date: 19 November 2019 Revised Date:
10 January 2020
Accepted Date: 13 January 2020
Please cite this article as: Chen, R., Yin, H., Peng, H., Wei, X., Yu, X., Xie, D., Lu, G., Dang, Z., Removal of triphenyl phosphate by nanoscale zerovalent iron (nZVI) activated bisulfite: Performance, surface reaction mechanism and sulfate radical-mediated degradation pathway, Environmental Pollution (2020), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2020.113983. 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.
Removal of triphenyl phosphate by nanoscale zerovalent iron
1 2
(nZVI) activated bisulfite: Performance, surface reaction mechanism
3
and sulfate radicalmediated degradation pathway
4
Ruxia Chena, Hua Yina*, Hui Pengb, Xipeng Weia, Xiaolong Yua, Danping Xiec, Guining Lua, Zhi Danga
5 6
a
7
Restoration in Industry Clusters, School of Environment and Energy, South China
8
University of Technology, Guangzhou 510006, Guangdong, China
9
b
Department of Chemistry, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, Guangdong, China
10
c
South China Institute of Environmental Sciences, Ministry of Ecology and
11
Environment, Guangzhou 510655, Guangdong, China
12
*Corresponding author.
13
E-mail address:
[email protected] (H. Yin)
14
Key Laboratory of Ministry of Education on Pollution Control and Ecosystem
15
Abstract
16
Recently, sulfate radical-based advanced oxidation processes (SR-AOPs) have
17
been studied extensively for the removal of pollutants, however, few researches
18
focused on the activation of bisulfite by nanoscale zerovalent iron (nZVI), especially,
19
surface reaction mechanism and sulfate radical-mediated degradation pathway have
20
not been elucidated in detail. In this study, influencing factors, the kinetics,
21
transformation pathway and mechanism of triphenyl phosphate (TPHP) degradation in
22
the nZVI/bisulfite system were systematically discussed. Compared with Fe2+, nZVI
23
was found to be a more efficient and long-lasting activator of bisulfite via gradual
24
generation of iron ions. The optimal degradation efficiency of TPHP (98.2%) and
25
pseudo-first-order kinetics rate constant (kobs = 0.2784 min-1) were obtained by using
26
0.5 mM nZVI and 2.0 mM bisulfite at the initial pH 3.0. Both Cl− and NO3− inhibited
27
the degradation of TPHP and the inhibitory effect of Cl− was stronger than that of
28
NO3− due to the higher reaction rate of Cl− with •SO4−. Furthermore, SEM, XRD and
29
XPS characterization revealed that a thin passivation layer (Fe2O3, Fe3O4, FeOOH)
30
deposited on the surface of fresh nZVI and a few iron corrosion products generated
31
and assembled on the surface of reacted nZVI. Radical quenching tests identified that
32
•SO4− was the dominant reactive oxidative species (ROS) for TPHP removal. Based
33
on HRMS analysis, six degradation products were determined and a sulfate
34
radical-mediated degradation pathway was proposed. In a word, this study revealed
35
that the nZVI/bisulfite system had a great potential for the TPHP elimination in
36
waterbody.
37
Key words
Triphenyl phosphate, nZVI, Bisulfite, Surface reaction, Sulfate radical
38
(•SO4−)
39
1. Introduction
40
Flame retardants (FRs) are widely used as additives of consumer products to
41
retard combustion. Brominated flame retardants (BFRs) had been banned in Europe
42
and America due to their persistence, bioaccumulation, and toxicity. With the phasing
43
out of BFRs, organophosphorus flame retardants (OPFRs) have gradually gained a
44
widespread attention recently (He et al., 2018a; He et al., 2018b). According to the
45
survey results by China Industry Information Network (CNII), the global total
46
production of OPFRs has increased from 1.97×106 in 2012 to 2.60×106 tons in 2018.
47
Triphenyl phosphate (TPHP), one of the primary OPFRs, has been applied as a flame
48
retardant, plasticizer and antifoaming agent in various industries (Hou et al., 2016;
49
Wei et al., 2019). TPHP can easily leak to the environment due to forming no
50
chemical bond with the polymer material (Marklund et al., 2003; Shi et al., 2019; Wei
51
et al., 2019), resulting in widespread detection in various biological (fish, birds and
52
poultry) and non-biological samples (air, water and sediments) (Cristale et al., 2013;
53
Ding et al., 2016). As was reported, the measured concentration of TPHP reached to
54
1.0 ng/L in seawater from coastal seas of China (Song et al., 2019b). In addition,
55
TPHP has a variety of toxic effects which can reduce the body’s immunity, including
56
neurotoxicity (Jarema et al., 2015; Sun et al., 2016; Shi et al., 2019), thyroid
57
endocrine disruption (Kim et al., 2015), reproductive and developmental toxicity (Liu
58
et al., 2013; Chen et al., 2015). Therefore, it is an urgent task to develop an
59
economical and effective technology to remove TPHP from waterbody.
60
In recent years, advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) have been universally
61
applied to degrade organic pollutants through •SO4− or OH oxidation attack (Matzek
62
et al., 2016; Cao et al., 2019; Xie et al., 2019). Compared with •OH (E0 = 1.8-2.7 V),
63
•SO4− has a higher redox potential (E0 = 2.5-3.1 V), higher selectivity and longer
64
half-life (30-40 µs) (Zhang et al., 2018; Zhou et al., 2019), leading to more advantages
65
than •OH in the degradation of contaminants by capturing and adding hydrogen atoms
66
over a wide pH range (Liu et al., 2017; Du et al., 2018; Cao et al., 2019). •SO4− can be
67
induced by various activation pathways of persulfate (PS) or peroxymonosulfate
68
(PMS), such as light radiation (An et al., 2015; Xie et al., 2015; Xie et al., 2019), heat
69
(Chen et al., 2017), alkali (Oh et al., 2016), transition metals (Li et al., 2014),
70
ultrasound (Hao et al., 2014) or organic matter (Fang et al., 2013). However, the high
71
price and the residual nature of PS and PMS limit the further application of this
72
technology (Xie et al., 2019). Thus, bisulfite (S(IV)) is receiving more and more
73
attention due to its advantages of economy, low toxicity and high reactivity (Zhou et
74
al., 2014; Du et al., 2018). Iron species have been widely applied as an activator of PS
75
or PMS as they are economical, accessible, eco-friendly and high-efficient. Song et al.
76
(2019a) had reported that Fe(II)/PS system exhibited an excellent TPHP removal
77
efficiency compared with Fe(II)/H2O2 system. However, a small amount of Fe2+ is
78
easily oxidized to Fe3+ quickly, thus losing catalytic activity. In addition, excessive
79
Fe2+ can quench •SO4− and even compete with contaminants for electrons, inhibiting
80
the degradation of pollutants (Xie et al., 2019). Unlike Fe2+, nZVI can gradually
81
release Fe2+ in waterbody to maintain a relatively stable Fe2+ concentration, which
82
shows excellent potential for catalyzing bisulfite.
83
Various studies have focused on the degradation aspects of free radical oxidation,
84
however, the surface reaction mechanism and sulfate radical-mediated degradation
85
pathway in nZVI/bisulfite system have not been elucidated.
86
In this work, the TPHP degradation kinetics, influencing factors (e.g., initial
87
solution pH, the dosage of nZVI/bisulfite and inorganic anions) and degradation
88
pathway in TPHP/nZVI/bisulfite system were systematically explored, focusing on
89
investigating the surface reaction process and sulfate radical-mediated TPHP
90
degradation mechanism. The current study expected to a) determine the excellent
91
synergistic effect of nZVI and bisulfite during the TPHP degradation process via
92
comparative experiments; b) investigate the interference of some possible influencing
93
factors ( pH, nZVI dosage, bisulfite concentration, inorganic anions) in the reaction; c)
94
interpret the reaction mechanism between nZVI and solution by SEM, XRD and XPS
95
characterization methods; and d) reveal the main free radical and the degradation
96
pathway of TPHP in the nZVI/bisulfite system.
97
2. Materials and methods
98
2.1. Chemicals and materials
99
All chemicals of high purity were used without further purification. Triphenyl
100
phosphate (TPHP, ≥99.8%, CAS: 115-86-6) was supplied from Sigma-Aldrich. TPHP
101
stock solution of 500 mg/L was prepared in HPLC grade methanol and stored in a
102
4 °C refrigerator for the follow-up experiments. This study used deionized water
103
produced by a Millipore Milli-Q system (EPED-20TS). Detailed information of other
104
reagents was provided in the supplementary Materials (Text S1).
105
2.2. Experimental procedure
106
2.2.1. Preparation of nZVI
107
nZVI was synthesized by borohydride reduction of ferrous chloride with some
108
modification according to the previous reports (Wang et al., 2017). Briefly, 6 g
109
FeCl2•4H2O was dissolved in 70 mL deionized water in a 500 mL conical flask. Under
110
vigorous stirring, 160 mL solution containing 7 g NaBH4 was added dropwise to
111
reduce Fe2+. After the mixture completely turned black, the conical flask was cooled
112
under vigorous stirring. Subsequently, the mixture was aged for 3 h and washed 3
113
times with absolute ethyl alcohol and deionized water to remove the impurity ions.
114
Finally, nZVI so produced was stored in the -20 °C refrigerator.
115
2.2.2. Batch experiments
116
All the batch experiments were conducted in a 100 mL conical flask at 30 ± 2 °C.
117
The 50 mL reaction system containing desired concentrations of TPHP and bisulfite
118
with 5% acetone as a cosolvent was completely mixed by magnetic stirrer. The initial
119
solution pH was adjusted by 0.1 M H2SO4 and 0.1 M NaOH. Then the reaction was
120
initiated after adding nZVI to the reactor. A volume of 2 mL sample was withdrawn at
121
the specific time and quenched with 40 µL methanol. Subsequently, 0.3 mL of 3 M
122
HCl was injected into the 2 mL sample to dissolve iron hydroxide, facilitating the
123
release of TPHP and its degradation intermediates. The sample was firstly extracted
124
with ethyl acetate for three times, then purged with nitrogen, fixed volume with
125
chromatographic grade n-hexane, filtrated by a 0.22 µm polyether sulfone (Nylon)
126
filter. The residual concentration of TPHP in the solutions was measured by a Gas
127
chromatography mass spectrometry (GCMS-QP2020, Shimadzu).
128
2.3. Analytical methods
129
The residual concentration of TPHP in the system was determined through a
130
GCMS (QP2020, Shimadzu) with an electron impact ion source, equipped with the
131
column of SH-Rxi-5Sil MS (30.0 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 µm). The sample of 1 µL was
132
injected into the autosampler and splitless injection was conducted in this work. The
133
procedure was as follows: 50 °C for 1 min, then 15.0 °C/min to 200 °C for 1 min,
134
finally 1.0 °C/min to 250 °C for 2 min. Other detailed information of the operational
135
condition parameters was presented in Text S2. Analysis of TPHP degradation
136
products was determined by a HPLC-TOF-MS system (Shimadzu Nexera Prominence
137
liquid chromatogram, Applied Biosystems SCIEX, USA) equipped with a Turbolon
138
Spray ion source. Detailed information of the operational procedure and condition
139
parameters were presented in Text S3 and Table S1. The solution pH was monitored
140
by a pH meter (PHS-3C). The concentrations of ferrous ions and total iron ions in the
141
solution were detected via O-phenanthroline spectrophotometry. Fresh and reacted
142
nZVI were characterized through SEM (Zeiss Sigma 500), XRD (BRUKER D8
143
Advance) and XPS (Thermo Fisher Scientific K-Alpha), respectively.
144
3. Results and discussion
145
3.1. Comparison of different processes on the degradation of TPHP
146
3.1.1. The removal efficiency of TPHP
147
In this study, five comparative experiments (I. nZVI, II. bisulfite, III. Fe2+, IV.
148
nZVI/bisulfite, V. Fe2+/bisulfite) for the removal of TPHP were firstly performed
149
under the same condition. As shown in Fig. 1a, only 7.0% and 18.7% of TPHP were
150
removed in Fe2+ and nZVI alone system, demonstrating that the reaction ability was
151
low between TPHP and the two compounds. Similarly, a slight TPHP removal (16.0%)
152
was obtained in bisulfite system, which could be attributed to a relative stability of
153
bisulfite in waterbody (Rayaroth et al., 2017; Cao et al., 2019). Compared with
154
Fe2+/bisulfite system (84.5%), a significant increase of TPHP removal (98.2%) was
155
acquired when nZVI was brought in bisulfite activation system. These results revealed
156
that nZVI could activate bisulfite adequately. In the nZVI/bisulfite system, reactions
157
could be induced by the following series of Eqs. (1)-(9) (Du et al., 2018):
158
Fe0 → Fe2+ + 2e-
(1)
159
Fe2+ + HSO3− → FeHSO3+
(2)
160
FeHSO3+ + 1/4O2 → FeSO3+ + 1/2H2O
(3)
161
Fe3+ + HSO3−
(4)
162
FeSO3+ → Fe2+ + •SO3−
(5)
163
O2 + •SO3− → •SO5−
(6)
164
•SO5− + •SO3− → •SO4− + SO42- + H+
(7)
165
•SO5− + •SO5− → 2•SO4− + O2
(8)
166
HSO3− + •SO4− → •SO3− + SO42- + H+
(9)
FeSO3+ + H+
167
It was worth noting that TPHP was continuously degraded throughout the whole
168
nZVI/bisulfite reaction process, while the degradation mainly occurred in the first 10
169
min and then remained stable in the follow-up reaction in the Fe2+/bisulfite system.
170
The result could be explained by the following reasons: (i) nZVI was gradually
171
corroded into Fe2+, which could permanently activate bisulfite in the nZVI/bisulfite
172
system, as shown in Fig. 1b; (ii) excessive Fe2+ would quickly consume bisulfite,
173
leading to the shortage of oxidants in the follow-up reaction (Eq. (2)); (iii) excessive
174
Fe2+ could quench the generated free radicals and inhibit the reaction (Eq. (10)) (Cao
175
et al., 2019).
176
Fe2+ + •SO4− → SO42- + Fe3+
177
(10)
In order to further clarify the role of dissolved iron ions during the degradation
178
reaction, the Fe2+ and total iron ions concentration were monitored subsequently.
179
3.1.2. Iron ions in the reaction system
180
As Fig. 1b depicted, Fe2+ concentration increased gradually to a maximum of
181
7.90 mg/L and remained constant with time in the nZVI alone system, suggesting that
182
nZVI was slowly corroded into Fe2+ in the acidic solution. Compared with the nZVI
183
alone, Fe2+ concentration increased rapidly to the peak (8.87 mg/L) at the first 4 min
184
and then dropped quickly to 0.82 mg/L in the nZVI/bisulfite system. The results could
185
be explained that nZVI was firstly corroded into Fe2+ at acidic condition, which was
186
supported by the decrease of solution pH (Fig. 1c) (Cao et al., 2017; Cao et al., 2019).
187
Generated Fe2+ would react with HSO3− to form •SO4− subsequently, resulting in a
188
significant decrease of Fe2+ from 4 min to 60 min. Similarly, the Fe2+ level in the
189
Fe2+/bisulfite system was instantaneous to reach the maximum value (11.02 mg/L)
190
and then declined to the minimum (0.57 mg/L). It was worth noting that the
191
concentration of Fe2+ remained basically unchanged (2nd-8th mins), which was
192
attributed to the regeneration of Fe2+ through the decomposition of FeSO3+ at high
193
concentration of bisulfite in the Fe2+/bisulfite system (Eqs. (2-5)). The total iron ions
194
concentration (Fig. 1d) quickly reached the maximum value (nZVI: 9.28 mg/L,
195
nZVI/bisulfite: 11.27 mg/L, Fe2+/bisulfite: 12.94 mg/L) within 20 min and then
196
remained basically stable in the three systems. As pH of the solution was lower than
197
4.0 (Fig. 1c), no large amounts of Fe2+ and Fe3+ complexes (Fe(OH)2, FeOH2+,
198
Fe2(OH)24+, Fe(OH)2+, Fe(OH)3 and Fe(OH)4−) would form, resulting in the relative
199
stability of total iron ions concentration in the three reaction systems (Wang et al.,
200
2017; Tan et al., 2018). In addition, a continuous increasing trend of Fe3+
201
concentration appeared in both nZVI/bisulfite and Fe2+/bisulfite systems and the
202
content kept constant at 1.0 mg/L in the nZVI alone system. It could also be attributed
203
to that a small amount of Fe2+ and Fe3+ in the solution formed an iron complex by
204
hydration and deposited on the nZVI surface which was further confirmed by XRD
205
and XPS in section 3.3.1, to prevent the inner Fe0 dissolution and achieve a balance of
206
hydration and dissociation, thereby maintaining the stability of the total iron ions
207
concentration on the solid-liquid interface. Yet, Fe2+ in the solution was constantly
208
oxidized to Fe3+ under aerobic conditions, causing a Fe2+ concentration decreasing
209
and Fe3+ concentration increasing (Fig. 1d).
210
In summary, higher concentrations of Fe2+ in the system would rapidly activate
211
bisulfite but cause a quenching reaction subsequently. Additionally, a large amount of
212
iron ions could lead to secondary pollution. Therefore, nZVI, as an ideal iron catalyst,
213
was selected in current work based on its important practical significance. As the
214
operating conditions played a key role in the degradation of TPHP by the
215
nZVI/bisulfite system, the kinetics of TPHP degradation need to be further explored.
216 217
Fig. 1. The change of relevant parameters with time in different systems. (a) removal
218
efficiency of TPHP; (b) ferrous ions concentration; (c) pH value; and (d) total
219
dissolved iron ions and ferric ions concentration. Experimental conditions: [TPHP]0 =
220
2 mg/L, [nZVI]0 = [Fe2+]0 = 0.5 mM, [bisulfite]0 = 2 mM, [pH]0 = 3.0 ± 0.1,
221
temperature = 30 ± 2 °C. The error bars represent the standard deviations.
222
3.2. Kinetics of TPHP degradation
223
3.2.1. Effect of initial pH
224
The solution pH may play a significant role in degradation of organic pollutants
225
via affecting the formation of free radical in the nZVI/bisulfite system. The effect of
226
initial pH on TPHP degradation was explored over the pH ranged from 2.0 to 6.0. As
227
illustrated in Fig. 2a, the elimination of TPHP at pH 3.0 and 4.0 was 98.2% and 76.0%,
228
respectively. However, poor degradation efficiencies were observed when initial pH
229
was 2.0, 5.0 and 6.0. It could be explained as follows: (i) the conversion from nZVI to
230
Fe2+ was facilitated under the acidic condition (pH = 3.0 and 4.0), which was
231
contributed to the activation of bisulfite; however, the activation efficiency of bisulfite
232
by Fe2+ dropped with the increase of pH (Tan et al., 2018); (ii) decomposition of
233
bisulfite was accelerated under the strong acidic condition (pH = 2.0), resulting in the
234
absence of oxidants for TPHP removal; (iii) a series of iron complexes (FeOH2+,
235
Fe(OH)2+, Fe2(OH)24+) could be generated on the nZVI surface due to water hydration
236
at pH > 4.0 (Wang et al., 2017), which had a low capability for inducing bisulfite to
237
generate •SO4−. More importantly, such iron complexes would restrain the corrosion
238
process of inner nZVI, leading to the reduction of nZVI reaction site and inhibiting
239
the electron transfer significantly. The following equations demonstrates the formation
240
of Fe3+ complexes (Zhang et al., 2017).
241
Fe3+ + H2O
FeOH2+ + H+
242
Fe3+ + 2H2O → Fe(OH)2+ + 2H+
(12)
243
2Fe3+ + 2H2O → Fe2(OH)24+ + 2H+
(13)
(11)
244
From another perspective, the increase of pH promoted the conversion of Fe2+ to
245
Fe3+ by phosphate ions, leading to the generation of iron phosphate complex which
246
could decrease the reactivity of free radicals (Liu et al., 2019). As such, pH = 3.0 was
247
selected as the optimal pH condition parameter.
248
3.2.2. Effect of initial nZVI concentration
249
The effect of nZVI dosage (0.1-0.75 mM) on the TPHP degradation efficiency
250
was investigated comprehensively. As shown in Fig. 2b, when nZVI dosage increased
251
from 0.1 mM to 0.5 mM, the TPHP removal efficiency increased rapidly from 68.0%
252
to 98.2% after 60 min. Simultaneously, the whole reaction followed pseudo-first-order
253
kinetics in the first 10 min. As presented in Fig. S1a, the kobs at 0.5 mM nZVI (0.2784
254
min-1) was almost 8.29 times higher than that at 0.1 mM nZVI (0.0336 min-1). The
255
improvement of TPHP removal efficiency could be attributed to the increased
256
available active sites and generated more Fe2+, which could effectively activate
257
bisulfite to produce •SO4− (Eqs. (1-8)). In addition, •OH might also be produced
258
through the corrosion of nZVI in the presence of O2 (Eqs. (14-16)) (Du et al., 2018).
259
Both •SO4− and •OH could contribute to the removal of TPHP. Yet, the lower TPHP
260
removal efficiency (90.0%) and kobs (0.1954 min-1) were obtained at higher nZVI
261
dosage (0.75 mM). The reasons could be elucidated as follows: (1) excessive Fe2+ was
262
generated to consume •SO4− (Eq. (10)); (2) the bisulfite decomposition was
263
accelerated, resulting in the sulfate radical recombination (Eq. (17)) (Cao et al., 2019).
264
Given that the higher reactivity of free radicals, 0.5 mM was chosen as the optimal
265
nZVI concentration.
266
Fe0
267
(14)
268
Fe0
269
(15)
+
O2
+
H2O2
2H+
+
+
2H+
→
→
Fe2+
+
H2O2
Fe2+
+
2H2O
270
Fe2+
271
(16)
272
•SO4− + •SO4− → S2O82−
273
3.2.3. Effect of initial bisulfite concentration
274
+
H2O2
→
Fe3+
+
OH-
+
•OH
(17)
As depicted in Fig. 2c, TPHP removal efficiency rose rapidly from 55.0% to 98.2%
275
and the kobs increased from 0.0320 min-1 to 0.2784 min-1 (Fig. S1b) with increasing
276
bisulfite concentration (0.5 mM to 2.0 mM) after 60 min. These results could be
277
interpreted that bisulfite was a source of ROS and the proportion of ROS elevated
278
with increasing bisulfite dosage. Similar to the negative impact of nZVI dosage, there
279
was a little decrease (80.1%) at 2.5 mM bisulfite concentration. It could be explained
280
that additional bisulfite would compete •SO4− and •OH with TPHP or consume •SO4−
281
to form a less oxidative •SO3− and •SO5− (Eqs. (9) and (6)), inhibiting the degradation
282
of TPHP. These results suggested that initial bisulfite dosage of 2.0 mM was the
283
optimum concentration.
284
3.2.4. Effect of coexisting ions
285
Coexisting ions in waterbody can quench free radicals and create new active
286
species to affect the removal process (Xie et al., 2017; Cao et al., 2019). This study
287
systematically investigated the effects of Cl− and NO3− as relative common anions in
288
waterbody on the degradation of TPHP. As shown in Fig. 2d, a significant inhibition
289
of TPHP removal (98.2% to 55.0%) was presented and the kobs declined dramatically
290
from 0.2784 min-1 to 0.0682 min-1 (Fig. S2a) with Cl− concentration enhancing from 0
291
to 5.0 mM, indicating that Cl− could significantly inhibit the degradation of TPHP.
292
According to Eqs. (18)-(20) (Xie et al., 2019), Cl− could react with •SO4− and •OH to
293
produce other chlorine active species such as •Cl and •Cl2− whose oxidation ability
294
were lower than that of •SO4− and •OH (Rao et al., 2014; Liu et al., 2019). Therefore,
295
the stronger inhibitory effect was observed as increasing Cl− concentration. Similarly,
296
a slightly declined removal efficiency (from 98.2% to 85.2%) of TPHP occurred in the
297
presence of NO3− (Fig. 2d) due to the lower oxidative capacity species formation
298
(•NO3−). Yet, NO3− had a lower reaction rate with •SO4− and •OH than Cl− (Eqs.
299
(21)-(22)) (Cao et al., 2019), therefore, it had almost no obvious inhibition on the
300
degradation of TPHP.
301
•SO4− + Cl− → SO42− + •Cl
k = (1.3-3.1) × 108 M-1S-1
(18)
302
•OH + Cl− → OH− + •Cl
k = 4.3 × 109 M-1S-1
(19)
303
•Cl + Cl− → •Cl2−
k = (0.65-2.1) × 1010 M-1S-1
(20)
304
NO3− + •SO4− → SO42− + •NO3
k = 5.5 × 105 M-1S-1
(21)
305
NO3− + •OH → OH− + •NO3
k < 5.5 × 105 M-1S-1
(22)
306
In a word, the kinetics of TPHP degradation was preliminarily discussed in the
307
nZVI /bisulfite system. Compared with other systems, an excellent TPHP degradation
308
efficiency was obtained in nZVI /bisulfite system which was attributed to the efficient
309
activation of bisulfite by nZVI.
310 311
Fig. 2. Effects of reaction conditions on kinetics of TPHP degradation. (a) initial pH;
312
(b) initial nZVI concentration; (c) initial bisulfite concentration; and (d) coexisting
313
inorganic anions (Cl− and NO3−). Experimental conditions: [nZVI]0 = 0.5 mM,
314
[bisulfite]0 = 2.0 mM, [TPHP]0 = 2.0 mg/L, [pH]0 = 3.0 ± 0.1, temperature = 30 ±
315
2 °C. The error bars represent the standard deviations.
316
3.3 Mechanism of nZVI/bisulfite system on TPHP degradation
317
3.3.1 Characteristics of nZVI particles
318
To elucidate the surface reaction of nZVI with bisulfite, spectroscopic analysis
319
was performed including SEM, XRD and XPS. As shown in Fig. 3a, the fresh nZVI
320
was present as chain-like aggregated spherical particles and uniformly dispersed with
321
each other, resulting in a large amount of voids generated (Ji et al., 2017). However,
322
the surface of nZVI was seriously damaged after reaction and numerous fragments
323
were formed according to Fig. 3b, which implied that the surface reaction was
324
involved in the degradation of TPHP (Cao et al., 2019).
325
To further reveal the phase composition of nZVI before and after reaction, XRD
326
analysis was conducted in this study under the premise of SEM results. The wide
327
angle XRD patterns of nZVI before and after reaction were presented in Fig. 3c.
328
Three prominent diffraction peaks at 2θ angles of 44.8°, 65.4° and 82.5° were in
329
accord with standard XRD structure of nZVI (Stefánsson et al., 2007; Rao et al., 2014;
330
Wu et al., 2017). Nevertheless, iron (hydroxy) oxides might not be detected by XRD
331
on account of too little content on the surface of nZVI (discussed subsequently by
332
XPS) (Cao et al., 2019). The XRD diffraction peak after the reaction indicated that the
333
peak intensity of Fe0 reduced or even disappeared with the progress of oxidation,
334
which was consistent with previous studies (Rao et al., 2014). Furthermore, it was
335
also observed that FeSO4 was assembled onto the surface of nZVI, suggesting that
336
sulfate was generated in the nZVI/bisulfite system (Cao et al., 2019; Tan et al., 2018).
337
The XPS analysis was conducted to better comprehend the surface elemental
338
composition and (hydroxyl) oxidation state of the nanomaterial (Fig. 4a-d). As shown
339
in Fig. 4a, for the fresh nZVI, a small peak at 706.5 eV indicated the existence of Fe0
340
(Rao et al., 2014), while the peaks at 710.0 eV, 710.8 eV and 712.0 eV were assigned
341
to Fe2+ peak of Fe3O4, Fe3+ peak of Fe2O3 and peak of FeOOH, respectively (Xu et al.,
342
2004; Ghauch et al., 2013). In addition, two oxygen peaks (O 1s: 529.7 eV, 531.1 eV)
343
ascertained in Fig. 4c represented lattice oxygen in metal oxides (O2−) and hydroxides
344
in surface hydroxides (OH−), respectively (Liang et al., 2009). It could be interpreted
345
that oxygen was still adsorbed onto the nZVI surface, even if protective measures
346
were taken (Li et al., 2019). These results indicated that the surface of fresh nZVI
347
might be covered by Fe3O4, Fe2O3 and FeOOH.
348
For nZVI after reaction, the Fe 2p3/2 and O 1s spectra were described in Fig. 4b
349
and Fig. 4d, respectively. The peak intensities of the three Fe(hydroxy)oxides had
350
been transformed based on the Fe 2p3/2 envelop (Fig. 4b). Moreover, the peak of Fe0
351
vanished and the peak (713.5 eV) of FeSO4 formed after reaction, indicating that the
352
electron transfer occurred on the nZVI surface during the degradation reaction. It was
353
revealed from Fig. 4d that typical spectrums of O 1s region were fitted into three
354
spectral bands at 529.7, 531.0 and 532.0 eV, corresponding to the lattice oxygen (O2−),
355
surface-adsorbed oxygen (OH−) and sulfate (SO42−), respectively. The appearance of
356
SO42− suggested that OH− on the nZVI surface took part in the reaction (Wu et al.,
357
2017). As shown in Fig. 4e and Fig. 4f, the fresh nZVI did not contain S element,
358
however, a distinct peak intensity was centered at 168.8 eV (S 2p) after reaction,
359
which stood for the presence of SO42− rather than other sulfur compounds (S2−, Sn2−).
360
This was consistent with the XRD results (Xie et al., 2017).
361
In brief, nZVI corrosion process involved nZVI oxidation and oxygen reduction
362
reaction under aerobic condition. Fe2+ was firstly generated via loss of electron on the
363
nZVI surface (Eq. (1)) and then hydrolyzed to form unstable Fe(OH)2 (Eq. (23)) (Guo
364
et al., 2015) . However, Fe(OH)2 was easy to be oxidized by O2, leading to various
365
iron (hydroxy)oxides generation such as Fe3O4, Fe2O3 and FeOOH. Simultaneously,
366
bisulfite played an oxidant role in the reaction and facilitated FeSO4 generation
367
according to Eq. (24) (Li et al., 2019). In addition, Fe3+ in the solution was also easily
368
hydrolyzed to form Fe(OH)3. On the basis of the above analysis, several iron (hydroxy)
369
oxides were produced and coated on the surface of nZVI.
370
Fe2+ + 2H2O → Fe(OH)2 + 2H+
(23)
371
FeOOH + SO42− + H2O → FeSO4 + 2OH− + 1/2H2 + 1/2O2
(24)
(a)
(b)
(c) 372 373
Fig. 3. Characterization of nZVI particles before and after reaction. (a) SEM images
374
of fresh nZVI; (b) SEM images of reacted nZVI; and (c) XRD observation.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
375 376
Fig. 4. XPS characterization of nZVI particles. (a)-(b) Fe 2p core level of nZVI
377
before/after reaction; (c)-(d) O 1s core level of nZVI before/after reaction; (e)-(f) S 2p
378
core level of nZVI before/after reaction.
379
3.3.2. Identification of the oxidation species
380
Some reactive oxygen species (•SO4− and •OH) responsible for the degradation
381
of TPHP might be generated in nZVI/bisulfite system. Scavenging experiments were
382
performed to evaluate contribution level of these free radicals. MeOH (with the
383
α-hydrogen) could react with •SO4− and •OH at 2.5×107 and 9.7×108 M-1S-1,
384
respectively, while the reaction rate of TBA (without the α-hydrogen) with •OH
385
((3.8-7.6) ×108 M-1S-1) was much higher than that with •SO4− ((4.0-9.1)×105 M-1S-1).
386
Hence, MeOH was employed to quench both •SO4− and •OH, and TBA was
387
considered to scavenge •OH (Qi et al., 2014; Du et al., 2018). As shown in Fig. 5, the
388
removal efficiency of TPHP achieved 98.2% at 60 min, whereas it declined to 89.7%
389
and 24.0% with addition of 100 mM TBA and MeOH, respectively, indicating that
390
•SO4− was major oxidants responsible for TPHP degradation. The contributions of
391
•SO4− and •OH to the degradation of TPHP were also calculated according to the
392
method reported by Song et al. (2019b) with the result of 66.9% and 8.7%,
393
respectively (Table S1). Therefore, •SO4− was the predominant radical for the
394
degradation of TPHP in the nZVI/bisulfite system. Insight into the effects of •SO4− for
395
TPHP degradation would be further provided in the further study.
396
397
398
Fig. 5. Effects of two quenchers (TBA and MeOH) on kinetics of TPHP degradation.
399
Experimental conditions: [nZVI]0 = 0.5 mM, [bisulfite]0 = 2.0 mM, [pH]0 = 3.0 ± 0.1,
400
[TPHP]0 = 2 mg/L, temperature = 30 ± 2 °C. The error bars represent the standard
401
deviations.
402
3.3.3. Possible degradation pathways of TPHP
403
Based on HRMS analysis, six stable products were screened and their molecular
404
formulas were also displayed: C12H11O4P (product A, m/z 251.047), C18H15O5P
405
(product B, m/z 343.073), C18H14O10PS (product C, m/z 454.012), C12H11O5P
406
(product D, m/z 267.042), C12H11O6P (product E, m/z 283.037), and C6H7O4P
407
(product F, m/z 175.015). The MS2 spectrum and detailed information of degradation
408
products were presented in Figs. S3-S8 and Table 1. Due to a series of addition,
409
substitution and rupture reaction of TPHP induced by •SO4−, the evolution pattern of
410
degradation products was shown in Fig. 6a and was further proved through the peak
411
intensity alteration of various degradation intermediates (Fig. 6b). The molecular
412
structure of TPHP consists of a central phosphate and three benzene rings which are
413
highly sensitive to be attacked by oxidants, resulting in generation of various
414
degradation products.
415
The generating pathway of product A may involve two conversion steps. Firstly,
416
the phosphate center was attacked by •SO4−, leading to an addition on TPHP molecule
417
and subsequent P-O bond cleavage. Secondly, •SO4− was ruptured via a chain of
418
electron transfer, and then product A was left through H2O molecules addition
419
reaction (Fig. S9). Product F was produced through the further conversion of product
420
A following the same pattern. The generating pathway of product B was similar to
421
that of product A and the different sites of TPHP molecule attacked by •SO4− were
422
observed. Hence, the generating pathway of product B may also relate to an addition,
423
substitution and cleavage (Fig. S10). Of note, there might be two conversion pathways
424
for the generation of product D. One might be formed via •SO4− attacking the benzene
425
ring of product A, and the other via •SO4− attacking the phosphate center of product B.
426
Product E might be formed via the further conversion of product D following a
427
similar route like product B. An addition of •SO5− on benzene ring of TPHP resulted
428
in the formation of product C.
429
Table 1 Identification of degradation products in the nZVI/bisulfite system Products labels
Molecular formula
[M+H]+
Retention time
A
C12H11O4P
251.047
20.44
B
C18H15O5P
343.073
28.64
C
C18H14O10PS
454.012
19.38
D
C12H11O5P
267.042
20.02
E
C12H11O6P
283.037
19.97
F
C6H7O4P
175.015
5.14
430
The relative intensity curves of degradation intermediates were presented in Fig.
431
6b. The relative intensity of product B rapidly reached to 1.327×107 at the 2nd min
432
and then presented a reducing tendency in the 8th min. Subsequently, the intensity of
433
product B remained stable until the end of the reaction. Similarly, the maximum
434
intensity of product A (2.234×106) was detected at the 4th min and then appeared a
435
moderate decreasing trend. The relative intensities of product D and E rapidly
436
increased to the maximum value 2.054×105 and 2.966×104, respectively, and then
437
exhibited a sharp downtrend. However, for the relative intensity of product C, no
438
obvious fluctuation occurred. The relative intensity of product F peaked at the 10th
439
min with the maximum value of 1.987×102 and then gradually declined within 60 min.
440
Of note, products A, B and D were the primary degradation intermediates in terms of
441
the intermediate abundance (Fig. S11). Besides, these results also indirectly elucidated
442
the potential transformation pathways between the intermediate products (Govindan et
443
al., 2014).
444 445
Fig. 6. The potential transformation pathways of TPHP (a) and peak evolution of
446
degradation products (b) using nZVI driving bisulfite. Experimental conditions:
447
[nZVI]0 = 0.5 mM, [bisulfite]0 = 2.0 mM, [pH]0 = 3.0 ± 0.1, [TPHP]0 = 2 mg/L,
448
temperature = 30 ± 2 °C.
449
In a word, reduction of TPHP by nZVI/bisulfite system was a coupling reaction
450
between nZVI surface reaction and sulfate radical-mediated oxidative degradation,
451
hence, possible degradation mechanism of TPHP was proposed based on above results
452
as follows: (I) H+ in strong acid solution dissolved the passivating oxide layer on
453
nZVI surface and accelerated the dissolution of inner nZVI, promoting Fe2+ formation
454
and activating a continuous electron transfer chain at the solid-liquid interface; (II) the
455
generated Fe2+ reacted with HSO3− rapidly to form unstable FeHSO3+, following a
456
series of decomposition and oxidation reaction to produce •SO4− and SO42−; (III) the
457
reactive oxide species attacked TPHP immediately through addition, substitution and
458
cleavage reaction (Guo et al., 2015; Wang et al., 2019). In addition, a small part of
459
nZVI reacted with H2O in the presence of O2 to generate •OH which might also be
460
contributed to degrading TPHP.
461
4. Conclusion
462
In this work, the kinetics, evolution pathway and surface reaction mechanism of
463
TPHP degradation were systematically investigated by a novel AOPs (nZVI/bisulfite
464
system). Five comparative experiments demonstrated the excellent synergistic effect
465
of nZVI and bisulfite, indicating the superiority of the material selection in this work.
466
Furthermore, increasing nZVI dosage (0.1 mM to 0.75 mM) or bisulfite concentration
467
(0.5 mM to 2.5 mM) accelerated the degradation of TPHP in the nZVI/bisulfite
468
system while an obvious inhibitory effect was achieved with the further increasing of
469
nZVI and bisulfite concentration. Both Cl− and NO3− inhibited the degradation of
470
TPHP, and Cl− presented a more pronounced inhibition. Based on the results of
471
characterization (SEM, XRD, XPS), a chain-like aggregated spherical particles,
472
wrapped with a passivation layer (Fe3O4, Fe2O3, FeOOH) of nanomaterial was
473
synthesized and FeSO4 was assembled on the surface of nZVI after reaction. In
474
addition, •SO4− was proved to be the main ROS responsible for the degradation of
475
TPHP in the nZVI/bisulfite system. According to LC-QTOF/MS analysis, six stable
476
intermediate products and a possible sulfate radical-mediated degradation pathway of
477
TPHP were proposed which was also demonstrated by the relative intensity curves of
478
intermediate products. In summary, the nZVI/bisulfite system was a promising
479
advanced oxidation process for the removal of TPHP.
480
Acknowledgments
481
This work was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation
482
of China (Nos. 41673091, U1501234, 41573091) and the National Key Research and
483
Development Program of China (No. 2018YFC1802800).
484
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HIGHLIGHTS: nZVI could permanently activate bisulfite so as to degrade TPHP efficiently. •SO4− was a key free radical for TPHP degradation. The surface reaction mechanism of nZVI was emphatically elucidated. Six degradation products and an evolution pathway were proposed.
Author Contribution Statement Contributor
Statement of contribution Conceptualization, Methodology, Validation, Data Curation,
Ruxia Chen Writing - Original Draft Conceptualization, Writing - Review & Editing, Hua Yin Funding acquisition Hui Peng
Writing - Review & Editing, Supervision
Xipeng Wei
Writing - Review & Editing
Xiaolong Yu
Writing - Review & Editing
Danping Xie
Supervision
Guining Lu
Supervision
Zhi Dang
Supervision
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: