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Freezing facilitates the non-radical activation of peroxydisulfate by β-MnO2 for contaminants degradation

Journal of Water Process Engineering [2025]
Xuanying Cai, Tiansheng Chen, Zhenhua Dai, Peiren Ding, Yinhao Dai, Peng Fan, Jihong Xu, Yuankui Sun, Xiaohong Guan
ABSTRACT

In cold regions, the freezing process typically presents difficulties for the remediation of contaminated soil and groundwater. However, in this work we report a freeze-assisted activation of peroxydisulphate (PDS) by β -MnO 2 for the degradation of phenolic compounds. The results showed that 60.8 % of 2,4-dichlorophenol (2,4-DCP) could be abated in frozen solutions at an initial pH of 6.5 within 2 h, whereas only 12.4 % of 2,4-DCP disappeared in aqueous solutions under other identical conditions. This enhancing effect was highly associated with the well-known freeze concentration effect, which could decrease the solution pH at the ice grain boundary by 2.4 units. Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopic analysis and experiments with quenching agents and D 2 O suggested that radicals and singlet oxygen were not the major reactive species involved in the β -MnO 2 /PDS system. Instead, Raman analysis indicated that PDS may be bound to the surface of β -MnO 2 to form a reactive inner-sphere complex of MnO 2 -PDS*, which is proposed to account for the oxidative degradation of 2,4-DCP in aqueous and frozen β -MnO 2 /PDS systems. Chronoamperometric experiments further showed the redox potential of the β -MnO 2 /PDS system was as high as 1.2 V. This work highlights the possibility of applying the freezing effect to accelerate PDS activation by minerals abundant in environment and thus offers a promising strategy for pollution remediation in cold regions.

MATERIALS

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