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  4. Kinetic and mechanistic aspects of selenite oxidation by chlorine, bromine, monochloramine, ozone, permanganate, and hydrogen peroxide
 
research article

Kinetic and mechanistic aspects of selenite oxidation by chlorine, bromine, monochloramine, ozone, permanganate, and hydrogen peroxide

Liu, Shaogang
•
Salhi, Elisabeth
•
Huang, Wanting
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November 1, 2019
Water Research

Selenium (mainly in the forms of selenite (Se(IV)) and selenate (Se(VI)) is a regulated drinking water contaminant, but there is little information on the kinetics and mechanisms of Se(IV) oxidation during water treatment. Species-specific and apparent second-order rate constants for the oxidation of Se(IV) at pH 7.0 were determined in buffered solutions and they decrease in the order bromine (5.8 0.3 x 103 M-1 s(-1)) > ozone (03, 513.4 10.0 M-1 s(-1)) > chlorine (61.0 3.6 M-1 s(-1)) > permanganate (2.1 0.1 M-1 s(-1)), monochloramine (NH2CI, (1.3 0.1) x 10-3 M-1 s(-1)), and hydrogen peroxide (H202, (2.3 0.1) x 10-5 M-1 s(-1)). The reaction stoichiometries for the reactions of Se(IV) with bromine, 03, chlorine, NH2CI, and H202 are 1:1. For Mn(Vll), the stoichiometries varied with pH and were 5:2, 3:2, and 1:2 for acidic, neutral, and alkaline conditions, respectively. Based on the reaction orders and stoichiometries, the corresponding Se(IV) oxidation mechanisms for various oxidants are discussed. The role of bromide for Se(IV) oxidation was also investigated during chlorination and ozonation of Se(IV)containing water. During chlorination, bromide-catalysis enhances the rate of the oxidation of Se(IV) to Se(VI) from 50% to nearly 90% with bromide concentrations of 50 pig L-1 and 200 pig L-1, respectively, at pH 7.0 and a chlorine dose of 2.0 mg L-1 (within 15 min). During ozonation, bromide had no effect on Se(IV) oxidation. Based on the determined second order rate constants, the oxidation of Se(IV) by chlorine and ozone were successfully predicted in a natural water by a kinetic model. The second order rate constants for the same oxidants were also investigated and/or evaluated for other related anions, such as arsenite (As(III)) and sulfite (S(IV)). They decreased in the order S(IV)> As(III)> Se(IV). (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.watres.2019.114876
Author(s)
Liu, Shaogang
Salhi, Elisabeth
Huang, Wanting
Diao, Kaisheng
von Gunten, Urs  
Date Issued

2019-11-01

Published in
Water Research
Volume

164

Article Number

114876

Subjects

Selenium

•

Chemical oxidation

•

Bromide

•

Oxidation mechanisms

•

Kinetic modeling

•

Arsenic

•

Sulfite

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LTQE  
Available on Infoscience
November 18, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/163183
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