Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4481515 Water Research 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Background constituents significantly inhibit advanced oxidation degradation.•Inhibition is more pronounced for OH than for 1O2•Differential inhibition due to ROS selectivity and inner filter effect.•Proposed model accurately describes inhibition for OH and 1O2

The ability of reactive oxygen species (ROS) to interact with target pollutants is crucial for efficient water treatment using advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), and inhibition by natural organic matter (NOM) can significantly reduce degradation efficiency. We compare OH-based degradation (H2O2-UV) to 1O2-based degradation (Rose Bengal) of several probe compounds (furfuryl alcohol, ranitidine, cimetidine) interacting in water containing background constituents likely to be found in treatment water such as natural organic matter (NOM) and phosphate, as well as in effluent from a waste-water treatment plant (WWTP). Hydroxyl radicals were much more susceptible to hindrance by all three background matrices (NOM, phosphate and WWTP effluent) tested, while 1O2 was only slightly inhibited by NOM and not by phosphate or WWTP effluent. A mechanistic model accounting for this inhibition in terms of radical scavenging and inner filter effects was developed, and accurately simulated the results of the NOM interactions. These results underscore the importance of considering the effect of background constituents in the selection of photocatalysts and in the design of AOPs for emerging applications in tertiary treatment of wastewater effluent and disinfection of natural waters.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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