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Highly Efficient Utilization of Ferrate(VI) Oxidation Capacity Initiated by Mn(II) for Contaminant Oxidation: Role of Manganese Species. | LitMetric

Highly Efficient Utilization of Ferrate(VI) Oxidation Capacity Initiated by Mn(II) for Contaminant Oxidation: Role of Manganese Species.

Environ Sci Technol

State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment, School of Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150090, China.

Published: February 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Manganese ion (Mn(II)) in natural waters enhances the oxidation of various compounds like bisphenol A (BPA) when combined with iron species (Fe(VI)), achieving higher oxidation rates compared to using Fe(VI) alone.
  • At specific molar ratios of Mn(II) to Fe(VI), different reactive species of iron and manganese play distinct roles in the oxidation process, particularly increasing the effectiveness of BPA degradation.
  • Further analysis showed that as the ratio of Mn(II) to Fe(VI) increased, the contribution of reactive manganese species (Mn(VII) and Mn(III)) to the oxidation of BPA became more significant, indicating a shift in the oxidation mechanism.

Article Abstract

Manganese ion [Mn(II)] is a background constituent existing in natural waters. Herein, it was found that only 59% of bisphenol A (BPA), 47% of bisphenol F (BPF), 65% of acetaminophen (AAP), and 49% of 4--butylphenol (4-BP) were oxidized by 20 μM of Fe(VI), while 97% of BPA, 95% of BPF, 96% of AAP, and 94% of 4-BP could be oxidized by the Fe(VI)/Mn(II) system [20 μM Fe(VI)/20 μM Mn(II)] at pH 7.0. Further investigations showed that bisphenol S (BPS) was highly reactive with reactive iron species (RFeS) but was sluggish with reactive manganese species (RMnS). By using BPS and methyl phenyl sulfoxide (PMSO) as the probe compounds, it was found that reactive iron species contributed primarily for BPA oxidation at low Mn(II)/Fe(VI) molar ratios (below 0.1), while reactive manganese species [Mn(VII)/Mn(III)] contributed increasingly for BPA oxidation with the elevation of the Mn(II)/Fe(VI) molar ratio (from 0.1 to 3.0). In the interaction of Mn(II) and Fe(VI), the transfer of oxidation capacity from Fe(VI) to Mn(III), including the formation of Mn(VII) and the inhibition of Fe(VI) self-decay, improved the amount of electron equivalents per Fe(VI) for BPA oxidation. UV-vis spectra and dominant transformation product analysis further revealed the evolution of iron and manganese species at different Mn(II)/Fe(VI) molar ratios.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.2c06931DOI Listing

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