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Oxyanion-Sensitive Catalytic Activity of Ni(II)/Oxyanion Systems for Heterogeneous Organic Degradation: Differential Oxidizing Capacity of Ni(III) and Ni(IV) as High-Valent Intermediates.

Hoon OhJi-Young KimKeun-Hwa ChaeJaesung KimEun-Tae YunYunho LeeChan Woo LeeGun-Hee MoonJaesang Lee
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2024)
This study demonstrated that NiO and Ni(OH) 2 as Ni(II) catalysts exhibited significant activity for organic oxidation in the presence of various oxyanions, such as hypochlorous acid (HOCl), peroxymonosulfate (PMS), and peroxydisulfate (PDS), which markedly contrasted with Co-based counterparts exclusively activating PMS to yield sulfate radicals. The oxidizing capacity of the Ni catalyst/oxyanion varied depending on the oxyanion type. Ni catalyst/PMS (or HOCl) degraded a broad spectrum of organics, whereas PDS enabled selective phenol oxidation. This stemmed from the differential reactivity of two high-valent Ni intermediates, Ni(III) and Ni(IV). A high similarity with Ni(III)OOH in a substrate-specific reactivity indicated the role of Ni(III) as the primary oxidant of Ni-activated PDS. With the minor progress of redox reactions with radical probes and multiple spectroscopic evidence on moderate Ni(III) accumulation, the significant elimination of non-phenolic contaminants by NiOOH/PMS (or HOCl) suggested the involvement of Ni(IV) in the substrate-insensitive treatment capability of Ni catalyst/PMS (or HOCl). Since the electron-transfer oxidation of organics by high-valent Ni species involved Ni(II) regeneration, the loss of the treatment efficiency of Ni/oxyanion was marginal over multiple catalytic cycles.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • stem cells
  • electron transfer
  • nitric oxide
  • high intensity
  • signaling pathway
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • highly efficient
  • water soluble
  • fluorescence imaging