Unveiling the reaction chemistry of sulfoxides during water chlorination
Species-specific second-order rate constants for the reactions of eight model sulfoxides with hypochlorous acid (k(HOCl)) were determined to be in the range of 2.7 M-1 s(-1) to 5.8 x 10(3) M-1 s(-1). A quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR) with Taft sigma* constants was developed based on eight measured k(HOCl)-values, showing a good linear correlation (R-2 = 0.89) with a negative slope rho = -1.5 typical for electrophilic reactions. The reaction is mainly controlled by HOCl, with a minor contribution of OCl-. The contributions of other reactive chlorine species (e.g., Cl-2 and Cl2O) to the overall kinetics are only 7 % for Cl2O and 5 % for Cl-2 under typical drinking water treatment conditions. A combination of several analytical methods (HPLC-MS/MS, HPLC-ICP-MS/MS, and NMR) was applied for the identification of transformation products. Major transformation products from the reactions of chlorine with sulfoxides are sulfones, Cl-substituted sulfoxides, aldehydes, and sulfonic acids potentially formed via a transient chlorosulfonium cation. In general, sulfoxides react more readily with chlorine compared to bromine. This might be caused by a partial positive charge on the sulfur which leads to a stronger interaction with Cl in HOCl having a smaller partial positive charge than Br in HOBr. The ratios of the species-specific second-order rate constants for the reactions of the selected sulfoxides with chlorine or bromine (k(HOCl)/k(HOBr)) range from 6 to 480. For sulfoxide compounds with strong electron-withdrawing substituents the reaction occurs most likely via a carbanion intermediate for which the reaction with HOBr is preferred, resulting in a k(HOCl)/k(HOBr) = 0.8.
10.1016_j.watres.2024.122806.pdf
Main Document
openaccess
CC BY
2.16 MB
Adobe PDF
d2a8f7168339f324a236b391ea4c0aec