ABSTRACT
Heterogeneous catalysts lag far behind their homogeneous counterparts in activating peroxymonosulfate (PMS) for water decontamination due to the low site intrinsic activity and sluggish mass transfer. The single-atom catalyst can bridge the gap between heterogeneous and homogeneous catalysts, but the difficulty to break scaling relations originating from the site monotony restricts further efficiency upgradation. Herein through modulating the crystallinity of NH2-UIO-66, a porous carbon support with ultrahigh surface area (1721.71 m2 g-1) is obtained to anchor the dual-atom FeCoN6 site, which exhibits superior turnover frequency over single-atom FeN4 and CoN4 sites (13.07 versus 9.97, 9.07 min-1). The as-synthesized composite thus outperforms the homogeneous catalytic system (Fe3++Co2+) for sulfamethoxazole (SMZ) degradation, and the catalyst-dose-normalized kinetic rate constant (99.26 L min-1 g-1) exceeds reported values by 1â¼2 orders of magnitude. Moreover, only 20 mg of the catalyst can run a fluidized-bed reactor to realize continuous zero discharge of SMZ in multiple actual waters for up to 8.33 h. Unlike all reported reaction routes, the catalysis on the diatomic site follows a new surface collision oxidation path, i.e. the dispersed catalyst adsorbs PMS to generate surface-activated PMS with high potential, which collides with surrounding SMZ and directly seizes electron from it to induce pollutant oxidation. Theoretical calculation indicates that the enhanced activity of FeCoN6 site stems from the diatomic synergy, leading to stronger PMS adsorption, larger near-Fermi-level density of states and optimal global Gibbs free energy evolution. Overall, this work provides an effective strategy of constructing heterogeneous dual-atom catalyst/PMS process to achieve faster pollution control than homogeneous system, and sheds light on the interatomic synergetic mechanism for PMS activation.
Subject(s)
Decontamination , Diatoms , Adsorption , Carbon , Catalysis , PeroxidesABSTRACT
Sodium bismuthate dihydrate (NaBiO3.2 H2O, NBH) nanosheets were successfully prepared in this study using the persulfate oil bath oxidation method. Benefited from the unique layered structure of NBH, the Fe(III) as a variable valence metal ion was explored for enhancing NBH activation of peroxymonosulfate (PMS) to degrade levofloxacin (LVF) in the visible-light catalytic system. Based on results of the reactive oxygen species (ROS) quenching experiments and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) analysis, singlet oxygen (1O2) and superoxide radical (O2·-) were identified as the main ROS. The morphology, chemical structure, and optical properties of NBH were analyzed using various characterization methods. It was confirmed that Fe(III) embedded in the NBH via the ion exchange with Na, resulting in lattice oxygen vacancies on the surface of the NBH, after the formation of oxygen defect sites, reacts with PMS in the solution to produce active oxygen species with oxidizing efficiency. This study expands the technological application of NBH in the catalytic oxidation of variable valence metals, which are essential for the removal of fluoroquinolone antibiotics.