Reinvestigation on High-Valent Cobalt for the Degradation of Micropollutants in the Co(II)/Peroxymonosulfate System: Roles of Co(III).
Yilong CaoZhen WangShaoxiong HeLixuan ShiKaiheng GuoJingyun FangPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2024)
Recently, reactive cobalt (Co) species, including Co(IV)-oxo and Co(II)-OOSO 3 - complexes, were proposed to be the primary intermediates formed during the process of activating peroxymonosulfate (PMS) by Co(II), mainly based on the observation that the methyl phenyl sulfoxide (MPSO) probe was transformed to methyl phenyl sulfone (MPSO 2 ) in this process. However, in this work, we rationalized the results of the MPSO probe assay based on the chemistry of aqueous Co(III), an alternative reactive Co species. Moreover, 18 O-labeled water experiments and Raman spectroscopy analysis clearly proved the Co(III) formation in the Co(II)/PMS system. In parallel, sulfate radicals (SO 4 •- ) and hydroxyl radicals (HO • ) were also involved in this system. Further, the relative contribution of Co(III) to the abatement of carbamazepine (CBZ), a representative micropollutant, in the Co(II)/PMS system was significantly increased by increasing the Co(II) dosage but was dramatically decreased by improving the PMS dosage and increasing the pH from 3 to 7. Additionally, the degradation pathway of CBZ by Co(III) and the Co(II)/PMS system was comparatively explored, confirming that Co(III) participated in the hydroxylation, carbonylation, deacetylation, and ring reduction of CBZ by the Co(II)/PMS system. Our work addresses the controversy regarding the reactive Co species involved in the Co(II)/PMS system with evidence of Co(III) as the chief one, which highlights the significance of re-evaluating the relative contribution of Co(III) in relevant environmental decontamination processes.