posted on 2018-01-16, 00:00authored byShuangshuang Cheng, Xinran Zhang, Xin Yang, Chii Shang, Weihua Song, Jingyun Fang, Yanheng Pan
This study investigated the role
of bromide ions in the degradation
of nine pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) during
the UV/chlorine treatment of simulated drinking water containing 2.5
mgC L−1 natural organic matter (NOM). The kinetics
of contributions from UV irradiation and from oxidation by free chlorine,
free bromine, hydroxyl radical and reactive halogen species were evaluated.
The observed loss rate constants of PPCPs in the presence of 10 μM
bromide were 1.6–23 times of those observed in the absence
of bromide (except for iopromide and ibuprofen). Bromide was shown
to play multiple roles in PPCP degradation. It reacts rapidly with
free chlorine to produce a trace amount of free bromine, which then
contributes to up to 55% of the degradation of some PPCPs during 15
min of UV/chlorine treatment. Bromide was also shown to reduce the
level of HO• and to change the reactive chlorine
species to bromine-containing species, which resulted in decreases
in ibuprofen degradation and enhancement in carbamazepine and caffeine
degradation, respectively. Reactive halogen species contributed to
between 37 and 96% of the degradation of the studied PPCPs except
ibuprofen in the presence of 10 μM bromide ion. The effect of
bromide is non-negligible during the UV/chlorine treatment.