Lim, SungeunBarrios, BenjaminMinakata, Daisukevon Gunten, Urs2023-05-082023-05-082023-05-082023-01-2710.1021/acs.est.2c07694https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/197422WOS:000963569000001Bromine radical (Br center dot) has been hypothesized to be a key intermediate of bromate formation during ozonation. Once formed, Br center dot further reacts with ozone to eventually form bromate. However, this reaction competes with the reaction of Br center dot with dissolved organic matter (DOM), of which reactivity and reaction mechanisms are less studied to date. To fill this gap, this study determined the second-order rate constant (k) of the reactions of selected organic model compounds, a DOM isolate, and monochloramine (NH2Cl) with Br center dot using gamma-radiolysis. The kBr center dot of all model compounds were high (kBr center dot > 108 M-1 s-1) and well correlated with quantum-chemically computed free energies of activation, indicating a selectivity of Br center dot toward electron-rich compounds, governed by electron transfer. The reaction of phenol (a representative DOM moiety) with Br center dot yielded p-benzoquinone as a major product with a yield of 59% per consumed phenol, suggesting an electron transfer mechanism. Finally, the potential of NH2Cl to quench Br center dot was tested based on the fast reaction (kBr center dot, NH2Cl = 4.4 x 109 M-1 s-1, this study), resulting in reduced bromate formation of up to 77% during ozonation of bromide-containing lake water. Overall, our study demonstrated that Br center dot quenching by NH2Cl can substantially suppress bromate formation, especially in waters containing low DOC concentrations (1-2 mgC/L).Engineering, EnvironmentalEnvironmental SciencesEngineeringEnvironmental Sciences & Ecologybromine radicalbromatedissolved organic mattermodel compoundsreaction kineticsozonelaser flash-photolysiscontaining watersadvanced oxidationhydroxyl radicalsrate constantswaste-waterkineticstransformationdegradationReactivity of Bromine Radical with Dissolved Organic Matter Moieties and Monochloramine: Effect on Bromate Formation during Ozonationtext::journal::journal article::research article