AI Article Synopsis

  • - The text discusses the potential of photolysis and photocatalysis as eco-friendly methods for degrading tough pollutants in water, but notes that widespread practical applications are still limited.
  • - It identifies key challenges in these processes, including interference from other substances in water, the formation of harmful by-products, and difficulties in detecting and measuring reactive radicals.
  • - The review emphasizes the importance of addressing these fundamental chemistry issues and suggests that future research should focus on improving experimental design to overcome these obstacles.

Article Abstract

For decades, photolysis and photocatalysis have been touted as promising environment-benign and robust technologies to degrade refractory pollutants from water. However, extensive, large-scale engineering applications remain limited now. To facilitate the technology transfer process, earlier reviews have advocated to developing more cost-effective and innocuous materials, maximizing efficiency of photon usage, and optimizing photoreactor systems, mostly from material and reactor improvement perspectives. However, there are also some fundamental yet critical chemistry issues in photo(cata)lysis processes demanding more in-depth understanding and more careful consideration. Hence, this review summarizes some of these challenges. Of them, the first and paramount issue is the interference of coexisting compounds, including dissolved organic matter, anions, cations, and spiked additives. Secondly, considerable concerns are pointed to the formation of undesirable reaction by-products, such as halogenated, nitrogenous, and sulfur-containing compounds, which might increase instead of reduce toxicity of water if inadequate fluence and catalyst/additive are supplied due to time and cost constraints. Lastly, a critical issue lies in the uncertainty of current approaches used for identifying and quantifying radicals, especially when multiple radicals coexist together under changing and interconvertible conditions. The review hence highlights the needs to better understand these fundamental chemistry issues and meanwhile calls for more delicate design of experiments in future studies to overcome these barriers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2020.115605DOI Listing

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