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A Faster and Cheaper Wastewater Treatment Solution

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Researchers at the University of California, Riverside have discovered a method to dramatically improve the way pollutants are removed from wastewater using Advanced Oxidation Processes (AOPs).

AOPs are a group of chemical treatment processes that use oxidation to remove organic materials from water. The reactions are performed by hydroxyl radicals (·OH) created by the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide, a powerful oxidizing agent that is used in both household and industrial settings.


AOP technologies are an appealing way to recycle contaminated wastewater, since the end products of hydrogen peroxide decomposition are water and oxygen. In reality, though, the reaction is slow, inefficient and requires large quantities of both hydrogen peroxide and ferrous (Fe2+, a divalent iron ion) salt—which serves as a catalyst. As a catalyst, the ferrous iron should remain chemically unchanged at the end of the oxidation reaction. However, that is not the case, causing the formation of an iron-containing sludge that then must be treated as a secondary pollutant.


Now, Yadong Yin, a professor of chemistry in UCR’s College of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, and colleagues have shown that adding into the mix another compound—called a co-catalyst—can dramatically improve the speed and efficiency of the reaction. The action of the co-catalyst reduces the amount of hydrogen peroxide and ferrous catalyst needed and helps prevent the formation of the sludge. The results are published today in the journal Chem.


Yin said the co-catalyst, a powdered metal sulfide, is an inexpensive way to speed up the reaction by helping the ferrous catalyst do a better job and persist in its original form, rather than forming the unusable, sludgy by-product.


Yin, an expert on nanomaterials, is now working to create smaller metal sulfide particles with more surface area to further increase co-catalyst performance.


“As the global demand for clean water continues to grow, it is critical that we develop cost-effective technologies to decontaminate polluted water,” Yin said. “This discovery provides the perfect catalytic system to improve an already promising process with applications in industry and municipal wastewater treatment.”

This article has been republished from materials provided by the University of California - Riverside. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

Reference
Mingyang Xing, Wenjing Xu, Chencheng Dong, Yaocai Bai, Jingbin Zeng, Yi Zhou, Jinlong Zhang, Yadong Yin. Metal Sulfides as Excellent Co-catalysts for H 2 O 2 Decomposition in Advanced Oxidation Processes. Chem, 2018; DOI: 10.1016/j.chempr.2018.03.002.