Manganese dioxides (MnO) are among important environmental oxidants in contaminant removal; however, most existing work has only focused on naturally abundant MnO. We herein report the effects of different phase structures of synthetic MnO on their oxidative activity with regard to contaminant degradation. Bisphenol A (BPA), a frequently detected contaminant in the environment, was used as a probe compound. A total of eight MnO with five different phase structures (α-, β-, γ-, δ-, and λ-MnO) were successfully synthesized with different methods. The oxidative reactivity of MnO, as quantified by pseudo-first-order rate constants of BPA oxidation, followed the order of δ-MnO-1 > δ-MnO-2 > α-MnO-1 > α-MnO-2 ≈ γ-MnO > λ-MnO > β-MnO-2 > β-MnO-1. Extensive characterization was then conducted for MnO crystal structure, morphology, surface area, reduction potential, conductivity, and surface Mn oxidation states and oxygen species. The results showed that the MnO oxidative reactivity correlated highly positively with surface Mn(III) content and negatively with surface Mn average oxidation state but correlated poorly with all other properties. This indicates that surface Mn(III) played an important role in MnO oxidative reactivity. For the same MnO phase structure synthesized by different methods, higher surface area, reduction potential, conductivity, or surface adsorbed oxygen led to higher reactivity, suggesting that these properties play a secondary role in the reactivity. These findings provide general guidance for designing active MnO for cost-effective water and wastewater treatment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.8b03383 | DOI Listing |
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