Identification of the Reactive Oxygen Species Responsible for Carbon Tetrachloride Degradation in Modified Fenton's Systems
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Abstract
The reactive oxygen species responsible for the transformation of carbon tetrachloride (tetrachloromethane, CT) by modified Fenton's reagent using hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) concentrations >0.1 M was investigated. Addition of the hydroxyl radical scavenger 2-propanol to modified Fenton's reactions did not significantly lower CT transformation rates. Scavenging by 2-propanol not only confirmed that hydroxyl radicals are not responsible for CT destruction, but also suggested that a major product of an iron (III)-driven initiation reaction, superoxide radical anion (O2-), is the species responsible for CT transformation. To investigate this hypothesis, CT degradation was studied in aqueous KO2 reactions. Minimal CT degradation was found in CT-KO2 reactions; however, when H2O2 was added to the KO2 reactions at concentrations similar to those in the modified Fenton's reactions (0.1, 0.5, and 1 M), CT degradation increased significantly. Similar results were obtained when 1 M concentrations of other solvents were added to aqueous KO2 reactions, and the observed first-order rate constant for CT degradation correlated strongly (R2 = 0.986) with the empirical solvent polarity (E(T)N) of the added solvents. The results indicate that even dilute concentrations of solvents, including H202, can increase the reactivity of O2- in water, probably by changing its solvation sphere. The higher reactivity of O2- generated in modified Fenton's reagent, which has a less polar nature due to the presence of H2O2, may result in a wider range of contaminant degradation than previously thought possible.
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