A critical review on correlating active sites, oxidative species and degradation routes with persulfate-based antibiotics oxidation.

School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tianjin University/Tianjin Key Lab of Biomass/Wastes Utilization, 300072 Tianjin, China. Key Laboratory of Jiangxi Province for Persistent Pollutants Control and Resources Recycle, Nanchang Hangkong University, 330063 Nanchang, China. School of Environmental Science & Engineering, Southern University of Science and Technology, 518055 Shenzhen, China. School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tianjin University/Tianjin Key Lab of Biomass/Wastes Utilization, 300072 Tianjin, China. Electronic address: yanbeibei@tju.edu.cn. School of Mechanical Engineering, Tianjin University of Commerce, 300134 Tianjin, China. Electronic address: chen@tju.edu.cn. School of Chemical Engineering and Advanced Materials, The University of Adelaide, 5005 Adelaide, SA, Australia.

Water research. 2023;:119926
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Abstract

At present, numerous heterogeneous catalysts have been synthesized to activate persulfate (PS) and produce various reactive species for antibiotic degradation from water. However, the systematic summary of the correlation among catalyst active sites, PS activation pathway and pollutant degradation has not been reported. This review summarized the effect of metal-based, carbon-based and metal-carbon composite catalysts on the degradation of antibiotics by activating PS. Metal and non-metal sites are conducive to inducing different oxidation pathways (SO4•-, •OH radical oxidation and 1O2 oxidation, mediated electron transfer, surface-bound reactive complexes and high-valent metal oxidation). SO4•- and •OH are easy to attack CH, S-N, CN bonds, CC double bonds and amino groups in antibiotics. 1O2 is more selective to the structure of the aniline ring and amino group, and also to attacking CS, CN and CH bonds. Surface-bound active species can cleave CC, SN, CS and CN bonds. Other non-radical pathways may also induce different antibiotic degradation routes due to differences in oxidation potential and electronic properties. This critical review clarified the functions of active sites in producing different reactive species for selective oxidation of antibiotics via featured pathways. The outcomes will provide valuable guidance of oriented-regulation of active sites in heterogeneous catalysts to produce on-demand reactive species toward high-efficiency removing antibiotics from water.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Review

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