Degradation
and Mineralization of Carbamazepine Using an Electro-Fenton Reaction
Catalyzed by Magnetite Nanoparticles Fixed on an Electrocatalytic
Carbon Fiber Textile Cathode
posted on 2018-10-16, 00:00authored byKai Liu, Joseph Che-Chin Yu, Heng Dong, Jeffrey C. S. Wu, Michael R. Hoffmann
Pharmaceutical wastes are considered
to be important pollutants even at low concentrations. In this regard,
carbamazepine has received significant attention due to its negative
effect on both ecosystem and human health. However, the need for acidic
conditions severely hinders the use of conventional Fenton reagent
reactions for the control and elimination of carbamazepine in wastewater
effluents and drinking water influents. Herein, we report of the synthesis
and use of flexible bifunctional nanoelectrocatalytic textile materials,
Fe3O4-NP@CNF, for the effective degradation
and complete mineralization of carbamazepine in water. The nonwoven
porous structure of the composite binder-free Fe3O4-NP@CNF textile is used to generate H2O2 on the carbon nanofiber (CNF) substrate by O2 reduction.
In addition, ·OH radical is generated on the surface of the bonded
Fe3O4 nanoparticles (NPs) at low applied potentials
(−0.345 V). The Fe3O4-NPs are covalently
bonded to the CNF textile support with a high degree of dispersion
throughout the fiber matrix. The dispersion of the nanosized catalysts
results in a higher catalytic reactivity than existing electro-Fenton
systems. For example, the newly synthesized Fe3O4-NPs system uses an Fe loading that is 2 orders of magnitude less
than existing electro-Fenton systems, coupled with a current efficiency
that is higher than electrolysis using a boron-doped diamond electrode.
Our test results show that this process can remove carbamazepine with
high pseudo-first-order rate constants (e.g., 6.85 h–1) and minimal energy consumption (0.239 kW·h/g carbamazepine).
This combination leads to an efficient and sustainable electro-Fenton
process.