Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
580259 | Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2010 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
The addition of 0.5 mM catechol is shown to accelerate the degradation and mineralization of the anionic surfactant DowFax⢠2A1 (sodium dodecyldiphenyloxide disulfonate) under conventional Fenton reaction conditions (Fe(II) plus H2O2 at pH 3). The catalytic effect causes a 3-fold increase in the initial rate (up to ca. 20 min) of conversion of the surfactant to oxidation products (apparent first-order rate constants of 0.021 and 0.061 minâ1 in the absence and presence of catechol, respectively). Although this catalytic rate increase persists for a certain amount of time after complete disappearance of catechol itself (ca. 8 min), the reaction rate begins to decline slowly after the initial 20 min towards that observed in the absence of added catechol. Total organic carbon (TOC) measurements of net mineralization and cyclic voltammetric and high performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) measurements of the initial rate of reaction of catechol and the surfactant provide insight into the role of catechol in promoting the degradation of the surfactant and of degradation products as the eventual inhibitors of the Fenton reaction.
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Authors
Carmem Lúcia P.S. Zanta, Leidi C. Friedrich, Amilcar Jr., Karen M. Higa, Frank H. Quina,