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Comparison of nitrate formation mechanisms from free amino acids and amines during ozonation: a computational study.

Shuning YinQunfang ShenYong Dong LiuRugang Zhong
Published in: Environmental science. Processes & impacts (2023)
Nitrate as a potential surrogate parameter for abatement of micropollutants, oxidant exposure, and characterizing oxidant-reactive DON during ozonation has attracted extensive attention, however, understanding of its formation mechanisms is still limited. In this study, nitrate formation mechanisms from amino acids (AAs) and amines during ozonation were investigated by the DFT method. The results indicate that N -ozonation initially occurs to produce competitive nitroso- and N , N -dihydroxy intermediates, and the former is preferred for both AAs and primary amines. Then, oxime and nitroalkane are generated during further ozonation, which are the important last intermediate products for nitrate formation from the respective AAs and amines. Moreover, the ozonation of the above important intermediates is the nitrate yield-controlling step, where the relatively higher reactivity of the CN moiety in the oxime compared to the general C α atom in the nitroalkane explains why the nitrate yields of most AAs are higher than those from general amines, and it is the larger number of released C α - anions, which are the real reaction sites attacked by ozone, that leads to the higher nitrate yield for nitroalkane with an electron-withdrawing group bound to the C α atom. The good relationship between nitrate yields and activation free energies of the rate-limiting step (Δ G ≠rls) and nitrate yield-controlling step (Δ G ≠nycs) for the respective AAs and amines verifies the reliability of the proposed mechanisms. Additionally, the bond dissociation energy of C α -H in the nitroalkanes formed from amines was found to be a good parameter to evaluate the reactivity of the amines. The findings here are helpful for further understanding nitrate formation mechanisms and predicting nitrate precursors during ozonation.
Keyphrases
  • nitric oxide
  • drinking water
  • amino acid
  • density functional theory
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • electron transfer
  • risk assessment
  • ionic liquid