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Unraveling the High-Activity Origin of Single-Atom Iron Catalysts for Organic Pollutant Oxidation via Peroxymonosulfate Activation.

Yaowen GaoYue ZhuTong LiZhenhuan ChenQike JiangZhiyu ZhaoXiaoying LiangChun Hu
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2021)
Single-atom catalysts (SACs) have emerged as efficient materials in the elimination of aqueous organic contaminants; however, the origin of high activity of SACs still remains elusive. Herein, we identify an 8.1-fold catalytic specific activity (reaction rate constant normalized to catalyst's specific surface area and dosage) enhancement that can be fulfilled with a single-atom iron catalyst (SA-Fe-NC) prepared via a cascade anchoring method compared to the iron nanoparticle-loaded catalyst, resulting in one of the most active currently known catalysts in peroxymonosulfate (PMS) conversion for organic pollutant oxidation. Experimental data and theoretical results unraveled that the high-activity origin of the SA-Fe-NC stems from the Fe-pyridinic N4 moiety, which dramatically increases active sites by not only creating the electron-rich Fe single atom as the catalytic site but also producing electron-poor carbon atoms neighboring pyridinic N as binding sites for PMS activation including synchronous PMS reduction and oxidation together with dissolved oxygen reduction. Moreover, the SA-Fe-NC exhibits excellent stability and applicability to realistic industrial wastewater remediation. This work offers a novel yet reasonable interpretation for why a small amount of iron in the SA-Fe-NC can deliver extremely superior specific activity in PMS activation and develops a promising catalytic oxidation system toward actual environmental cleanup.
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