AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted to compare the performance of natural iron minerals and zero-valent metals as catalysts in the Fenton-like process for removing imidacloprid, revealing that zero-valent iron (ZVI) had the highest removal efficiency at 96.8%.
  • Vanadium titano-magnetite (VTM) showed strong initial activity but had low reusability, while pyrite demonstrated a stable but moderate ability to degrade the pesticide over multiple uses.
  • Overall, most tested catalysts, except ZVC and VTM, posed a low risk of secondary pollution from toxic metals in this application, with catalysis favorably occurring under acidic conditions around pH 2 to 3.

Article Abstract

Natural iron minerals and zero-valent metals have been widely tested as catalysts for the Fenton-like process, but the systematical comparison study about their catalytic performance was rarely conducted, and the risk of the secondary pollution of toxic heavy metals was still not uncertain. In this paper, a comparison study of applying pyrite, ilmenite, vanadium titano-magnetite (VTM), zero-valent iron (ZVI), and zero-valent copper (ZVC) as Fenton-like catalysts for the removal of imidacloprid was performed. The results showed that ZVI exhibited the highest activity among the recyclable solid catalysts with a removal rate of 96.8% at initial pH 3 using 10.78 mmol/L HO, due to iron corrosive dissolution. Vanadium titano-magnetite (VTM) exhibited the best activity at first use among tested minerals but with low reusability. Pyrite with stable morphology showed a medium but sustainable ability to degrade imidacloprid, achieving a removal rate of 10.5% in the fifth use. The reaction much favored the acidic condition of initial pH around 2 or 3. Meanwhile, there was a significant positive correlation between removal efficiency and dissolved Fe or Cu concentration. Pyrite was considered to be a promising catalyst in Fenton-like reaction. It was suggested that the system proceeded predominantly through a homogeneous route via dissolved Fe or Cu ions. Except ZVC and VTM, other tested catalysts showed the low possibility of causing secondary pollution of toxic metals in the application of Fenton-like process.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-021-13731-xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

comparison study
12
catalysts removal
12
study applying
8
natural iron
8
iron minerals
8
minerals zero-valent
8
zero-valent metals
8
fenton-like catalysts
8
removal imidacloprid
8
tested catalysts
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!