Peroxymonosulfate Activation by Fe(III)-Picolinate Complexes for Efficient Water Treatment at Circumneutral pH: Fe(III)/Fe(IV) Cycle and Generation of Oxyl Radicals.
Zhichao YangYaodan CuiBingcai PanJoseph J PignatelloPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2023)
Improving the reactivity of Fe(III) for activating peroxymonosulfate (PMS) at circumneutral pH is critical to propel the iron-activated PMS processes toward practical wastewater treatment but is yet challenging. Here we employed the complexes of Fe(III) with the biodegradable picolinic acid (PICA) to activate PMS for degradation of selected chlorinated phenols, antibiotics, pharmaceuticals, herbicides, and industrial compounds at pH 4.0-6.0. The Fe III -PICA complexes greatly outperformed the ligand-free Fe(III) and other Fe(III) complexes of common aminopolycarboxylate ligands. In the main activation pathway, the key intermediate is a peroxymonosulfate complex, tentatively identified as PICA-Fe III -OOSO 3 - , which undergoes O-O homolysis or reacts with Fe III -PICA and PMS to yield Fe IV =O and SO 4 •- without the involvement of commonly invoked Fe(II). PICA-Fe III -OOSO 3 - can also react directly with certain compounds (chlorophenols and sulfamethoxazole). The relative contributions of PICA-Fe III -OOSO 3 - , Fe IV =O, and SO 4 •- depend on the structure of target compounds. This work sets an eligible example to enhance the reactivity of Fe(III) toward PMS activation by ligands and sheds light on the previously unrecognized role of the metal-PMS complexes in directing the catalytic cycle and decontamination as well.