Melamine enhancing Cu-Fenton reaction for degradation of anthracyclines.

J Hazard Mater

School of Chemical Engineering, College of Chemistry and Materials, State-Province Joint Engineering Laboratory of Zeolite Membrane Materials, Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang 330022, China.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • A new melamine (MA) enhanced Cu-Fenton process shows significantly improved degradation rates for anthracyclines like daunorubicin (DNR), with a first-order apparent constant 5.2 times higher than traditional methods.
  • The coordination between copper (Cu) and melamine (MA) stabilizes Cu species, leading to better efficiency in the Cu-Fenton reaction, particularly with pre-synthesized Cu-MA complexes like CM-250, which also require less energy for DNR degradation.
  • This enhanced process generates various reactive oxygen species, primarily O, which boosts both the degradation rate and overall effectiveness against multiple pollutants, indicating strong potential for larger-scale applications in environmental remediation

Article Abstract

Melamine (MA) enhanced Cu-Fenton process was developed for the degradation of anthracyclines. Taking daunorubicin (DNR) degradation as an example, we found that the initial first-order apparent constant of Cu/MA/HO system with a molar ratio of 1:8 for Cu:MA was 5.2 times higher than that of conventional Cu/HO system. The in-situ reductive coordination between Cu and MA facilitated the generation and stabilization of Cu species, thereby accelerating the rate-limiting step of Cu/Cu conversion and maintaining high levels of Cu during the degradation process. Moreover, pre-synthesized Cu-MA complexes (e.g., CM-250) further enhanced the efficiency of the Cu-Fenton reaction by increasing both the Cu proportion and MA chelation. The apparent activation energy for DNR degradation in CM-250 mediated Fenton reaction (15.9 kJ mol) was lower than that in systems involving Cu/MA (41.2 kJ mol) and Cu (65.6 kJ mol). Enhanced generation of various reactive oxygen species (·OH,·O, and O) was confirmed, with O playing a dominant role, significantly improving both degradation rate and mineralization degree for DNR. MA-enhanced Cu-Fenton process also offers a convenient alternative to effectively remove other anthracyclines and organic micropollutants, holding great promise for advancing advanced oxidation processes as well as practical large-scale degradation applications targeting multiple pollutants.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.136035DOI Listing

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