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Deciphering Evolution Pathway of Supported NO(3)(•) Enabled via Radical Transfer from (•)OH to Surface NO(3)(–) Functionality for Oxidative Degradation of Aqueous Contaminants

[Image: see text] NO(3)(•) can compete with omnipotent (•)OH/SO(4)(•–) in decomposing aqueous pollutants because of its lengthy lifespan and significant tolerance to background scavengers present in H(2)O matrices, albeit with moderate oxidizing power. The generation of NO(3)(•), however, is of gran...

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Autores principales: Kim, Jongsik, Choe, Yun Jeong, Kim, Sang Hoon, Choi, In-Suk, Jeong, Keunhong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8397361/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34467355
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.1c00124
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author Kim, Jongsik
Choe, Yun Jeong
Kim, Sang Hoon
Choi, In-Suk
Jeong, Keunhong
author_facet Kim, Jongsik
Choe, Yun Jeong
Kim, Sang Hoon
Choi, In-Suk
Jeong, Keunhong
author_sort Kim, Jongsik
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] NO(3)(•) can compete with omnipotent (•)OH/SO(4)(•–) in decomposing aqueous pollutants because of its lengthy lifespan and significant tolerance to background scavengers present in H(2)O matrices, albeit with moderate oxidizing power. The generation of NO(3)(•), however, is of grand demand due to the need of NO(2)(•)/O(3), radioactive element, or NaNO(3)/HNO(3) in the presence of highly energized electron/light. This study has pioneered a singular pathway used to radicalize surface NO(3)(–) functionalities anchored on polymorphic α-/γ-MnO(2) surfaces (α-/γ-MnO(2)-N), in which Lewis acidic Mn(2+/3+) and NO(3)(–) served to form (•)OH via H(2)O(2) dissection and NO(3)(•) via radical transfer from (•)OH to NO(3)(–) ((•)OH → NO(3)(•)), respectively. The elementary steps proposed for the (•)OH → NO(3)(•) route could be energetically favorable and marginal except for two stages such as endothermic (•)OH desorption and exothermic (•)OH-mediated NO(3)(–) radicalization, as verified by EPR spectroscopy experiments and DFT calculations. The Lewis acidic strength of the Mn(2+/3+) species innate to α-MnO(2)-N was the smallest among those inherent to α-/β-/γ-MnO(2) and α-/γ-MnO(2)-N. Hence, α-MnO(2)-N prompted the rate-determining stage of the (•)OH → NO(3)(•) route ((•)OH desorption) in the most efficient manner, as also evidenced by the analysis on the energy barrier required to proceed with the (•)OH → NO(3)(•) route. Meanwhile, XANES and in situ DRIFT spectroscopy experiments corroborated that α-MnO(2)-N provided a larger concentration of surface NO(3)(–) species with bi-dentate binding arrays than γ-MnO(2)-N. Hence, α-MnO(2)-N could outperform γ-MnO(2)-N in improving the collision frequency between (•)OH and NO(3)(–) species and in facilitating the exothermic transition of NO(3)(–) functionalities to surface NO(3)(•) analogues per unit time. These were corroborated by a greater efficiency of α-MnO(2)-N in decomposing phenol, in addition to scavenging/filtration control runs and DFT calculations. Importantly, supported NO(3)(•) species provided 5–7-fold greater efficiency in degrading textile wastewater than conventional (•)OH and supported SO(4)(•-) analogues we discovered previously.
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spelling pubmed-83973612021-08-30 Deciphering Evolution Pathway of Supported NO(3)(•) Enabled via Radical Transfer from (•)OH to Surface NO(3)(–) Functionality for Oxidative Degradation of Aqueous Contaminants Kim, Jongsik Choe, Yun Jeong Kim, Sang Hoon Choi, In-Suk Jeong, Keunhong JACS Au [Image: see text] NO(3)(•) can compete with omnipotent (•)OH/SO(4)(•–) in decomposing aqueous pollutants because of its lengthy lifespan and significant tolerance to background scavengers present in H(2)O matrices, albeit with moderate oxidizing power. The generation of NO(3)(•), however, is of grand demand due to the need of NO(2)(•)/O(3), radioactive element, or NaNO(3)/HNO(3) in the presence of highly energized electron/light. This study has pioneered a singular pathway used to radicalize surface NO(3)(–) functionalities anchored on polymorphic α-/γ-MnO(2) surfaces (α-/γ-MnO(2)-N), in which Lewis acidic Mn(2+/3+) and NO(3)(–) served to form (•)OH via H(2)O(2) dissection and NO(3)(•) via radical transfer from (•)OH to NO(3)(–) ((•)OH → NO(3)(•)), respectively. The elementary steps proposed for the (•)OH → NO(3)(•) route could be energetically favorable and marginal except for two stages such as endothermic (•)OH desorption and exothermic (•)OH-mediated NO(3)(–) radicalization, as verified by EPR spectroscopy experiments and DFT calculations. The Lewis acidic strength of the Mn(2+/3+) species innate to α-MnO(2)-N was the smallest among those inherent to α-/β-/γ-MnO(2) and α-/γ-MnO(2)-N. Hence, α-MnO(2)-N prompted the rate-determining stage of the (•)OH → NO(3)(•) route ((•)OH desorption) in the most efficient manner, as also evidenced by the analysis on the energy barrier required to proceed with the (•)OH → NO(3)(•) route. Meanwhile, XANES and in situ DRIFT spectroscopy experiments corroborated that α-MnO(2)-N provided a larger concentration of surface NO(3)(–) species with bi-dentate binding arrays than γ-MnO(2)-N. Hence, α-MnO(2)-N could outperform γ-MnO(2)-N in improving the collision frequency between (•)OH and NO(3)(–) species and in facilitating the exothermic transition of NO(3)(–) functionalities to surface NO(3)(•) analogues per unit time. These were corroborated by a greater efficiency of α-MnO(2)-N in decomposing phenol, in addition to scavenging/filtration control runs and DFT calculations. Importantly, supported NO(3)(•) species provided 5–7-fold greater efficiency in degrading textile wastewater than conventional (•)OH and supported SO(4)(•-) analogues we discovered previously. American Chemical Society 2021-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8397361/ /pubmed/34467355 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.1c00124 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Kim, Jongsik
Choe, Yun Jeong
Kim, Sang Hoon
Choi, In-Suk
Jeong, Keunhong
Deciphering Evolution Pathway of Supported NO(3)(•) Enabled via Radical Transfer from (•)OH to Surface NO(3)(–) Functionality for Oxidative Degradation of Aqueous Contaminants
title Deciphering Evolution Pathway of Supported NO(3)(•) Enabled via Radical Transfer from (•)OH to Surface NO(3)(–) Functionality for Oxidative Degradation of Aqueous Contaminants
title_full Deciphering Evolution Pathway of Supported NO(3)(•) Enabled via Radical Transfer from (•)OH to Surface NO(3)(–) Functionality for Oxidative Degradation of Aqueous Contaminants
title_fullStr Deciphering Evolution Pathway of Supported NO(3)(•) Enabled via Radical Transfer from (•)OH to Surface NO(3)(–) Functionality for Oxidative Degradation of Aqueous Contaminants
title_full_unstemmed Deciphering Evolution Pathway of Supported NO(3)(•) Enabled via Radical Transfer from (•)OH to Surface NO(3)(–) Functionality for Oxidative Degradation of Aqueous Contaminants
title_short Deciphering Evolution Pathway of Supported NO(3)(•) Enabled via Radical Transfer from (•)OH to Surface NO(3)(–) Functionality for Oxidative Degradation of Aqueous Contaminants
title_sort deciphering evolution pathway of supported no(3)(•) enabled via radical transfer from (•)oh to surface no(3)(–) functionality for oxidative degradation of aqueous contaminants
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8397361/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34467355
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.1c00124
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