posted on 2023-05-09, 12:34authored byJing Zhao, Chii Shang, Ran Yin
Increasing the radical yield and reducing energy consumption
would
enhance the sustainability and competitiveness of advanced oxidation
processes (AOPs) for micropollutant degradation in water. We herein
report a novel AOP coupling far-UVC radiation at 222 nm with chlorinated
cyanurates (termed the UV222/Cl-cyanurates AOP) for radical
generation and micropollutant abatement in water. We experimentally
determined the concentrations of HO•, Cl•, and ClO• in the UV222/Cl-cyanurates
AOP in deionized water and swimming pool water. The radical concentrations
are 10–27 times and 4–13 times, respectively, higher
than those in the UV254/Cl-cyanurates AOP and the well-documented
UV254/chlorine AOP under comparable conditions (e.g., same
UV fluence and oxidant dosing). We determined the molar absorption
coefficients and innate quantum yields of two chlorine species and
two Cl-cyanurates at 222 nm and incorporated these parameters into
a kinetic model. The model enables accurate prediction of oxidant
photodecay rates as well as the pH impact on radical generation in
the UV222/Cl-cyanurates AOP. We predicted the pseudo-first-order
degradation rate constants of 25 micropollutants in the UV222/Cl-cyanurates AOP and demonstrated that many micropollutants can
be degraded by >80% with a low UV fluence of 25 mJ cm–2. This work advances the fundamental photochemistry of chlorine and
Cl-cyanurates at 222 nm and offers a highly effective engineering
tool in combating micropollutants in water where Cl-cyanurates are
suitable to use.