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  4. Natural iron ligands promote a metal-based oxidation mechanism for the Fenton reaction in water environments
 
research article

Natural iron ligands promote a metal-based oxidation mechanism for the Fenton reaction in water environments

Farinelli, Giulio
•
Minella, Marco
•
Pazzi, Marco
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July 5, 2020
Journal Of Hazardous Materials

The Fenton reaction is an effective advanced oxidation process occurring in nature and applied in engineering processes toward the degradation of harmful substances, including contaminants of emerging concern. The traditional Fenton application can be remarkably improved by using iron complexes with organic ligands, which allow for the degradation of contaminants at near-neutral pH and for the reduction of sludge production. This work discusses the mechanisms involved both in the classic Fenton process and in the presence of ligands that coordinate iron. Cyclohexane was selected as mechanistic probe, by following the formation of the relevant products, namely, cyclohexanol (A) and cyclohexanone (K). As expected, the classic Fenton process was associated with an A/K ratio of approximately 1, evidence of a dominant free radical behavior. Significantly, the presence of widely common natural and synthetic carboxyl ligands selectively produced mostly the alcoholic species in the first oxidation step. A ferryl-based mechanism was thus preferred when iron complexes were formed. Common iron ligands are here proven to direct the reaction pathway towards a selective metal-based catalysis. Such a system may be more easily engineered than a free radical-based one to safely remove hazardous contaminants from water and minimize the production of harmful intermediates.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.122413
Web of Science ID

WOS:000532829200072

Author(s)
Farinelli, Giulio
Minella, Marco
Pazzi, Marco
Giannakis, Stefanos
Pulgarin, Cesar  
Vione, Davide
Tiraferri, Alberto
Date Issued

2020-07-05

Publisher

ELSEVIER

Published in
Journal Of Hazardous Materials
Volume

393

Article Number

122413

Subjects

Engineering, Environmental

•

Environmental Sciences

•

Engineering

•

Environmental Sciences & Ecology

•

advanced oxidation

•

fenton mechanism

•

iron ligands

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free radical mechanism

•

metal-based catalysis

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photo-fenton

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hydroxyl radicals

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hydrogen-peroxide

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electro-fenton

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degradation

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ph

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activation

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dioxygen

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oxidant

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systems

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
GPAO  
Available on Infoscience
May 31, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/169022
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