Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8851269 | Chemosphere | 2018 | 29 Pages |
Abstract
This research investigated persulfate electrosynthesis using a boron-doped diamond anode and a chemical reaction of persulfate in its activated form with an herbicide, 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D). The first part of this research is dedicated to the influence of the applied current density on the electrosynthesis of persulfate. The first part shows that for a 2â¯M sulfuric acid, the current efficiency reached 96% for 5â¯mA/cm2 and dropped to 52% for a higher current density (100â¯mAâ¯cmâ2). This fall cannot be explained by mass transfer limitations: an increase in temperature (from 9 to 30â¯Â°C) during electrolysis leads to the decomposition of 23% of the persulfate. The second part of this research shows that a quasi-complete degradation of the target herbicide can be reached under controlled operating conditions: (i) a high ratio of initial concentrations [Persulfate]/[2,4-D], (ii) a minimum temperature of 60â¯Â°C that produces sulfate radicals by heat decomposition of persulfate, and (iii) a sufficient contact time between reactants is required under dynamic conditions.
Keywords
Related Topics
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Environmental Science
Environmental Chemistry
Authors
Jingju Cai, Minghua Zhou, Ye Liu, André Savall, Karine Groenen Serrano,