Abstract

Recently, it has been reported that chlorine dioxide (ClO2) and (bi)sulfite/ClO2 showed excellent performance in micropollutant removal from water; however, the degradation mechanisms and application boundaries of the two system have not been identified. In this study, bisphenol A (BPA) was chosen as the target contaminant to give multiple comparisons of ClO2 and S(IV)/ClO2 process regarding the degradation performance of contaminant, generation of reactive species, transformation of products and toxicity variation. Both ClO2 and S(IV)/ClO2 can degrade BPA within 3 min. The BPA degradation mechanism was mainly based on direct oxidation in ClO2 process while it was attributed to radicals (especially SO4·-) generation in S(IV)/ClO2 process. Meanwhile, the effect of pH and coexisting substances (Cl−, Br−, HCO3− and HA) were evaluated. It was found that ClO2 preferred the neutral and alkaline condition and S(IV)/ClO2 preferred the acidic condition for BPA degradation. An unexpected speed-up of BPA degradation was observed in ClO2 process in the presence of Br−, HCO3− and HA. In addition, the intermediate products in BPA degradation were identified. Three exclusive products were found in ClO2 process, in which p-benzoquinone was considered to be the reason of the acute toxicity increase in ClO2 process.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call