Abstract

This study investigated the reaction pathway of 2,4-dinitroanisole (DNAN) on the pyrogenic carbonaceous matter (PCM) to assess the scope and mechanism of PCM-facilitated surface hydrolysis. DNAN degradation was observed at pH 11.5 and 25 °C with a model PCM, graphite, whereas no significant decay occurred without graphite. Experiments were performed at pH 11.5 due to the lack of DNAN decay at pH below 11.0, which was consistent with previous studies. Graphite exhibited a 1.78-fold enhancement toward DNAN decay at 65 °C and pH 11.5 relative to homogeneous solution by lowering the activation energy for DNAN hydrolysis by 54.3 ± 3.9%. This is supported by our results from the computational modeling using Car-Parrinello simulations by ab initio molecular dynamics/molecular mechanics (AIMD/MM) and DFT free energy simulations, which suggest that PCM effectively lowered the reaction barriers by approximately 8 kcal mol-1 compared to a homogeneous solution. Quaternary ammonium (QA)-modified activated carbon performed the best among several PCMs by reducing DNAN half-life from 185 to 2.5 days at pH 11.5 and 25 °C while maintaining its reactivity over 10 consecutive additions of DNAN. We propose that PCM can affect the thermodynamics and kinetics of hydrolysis reactions by confining the reaction species near PCM surfaces, thus making them less accessible to solvent molecules and creating an environment with a weaker dielectric constant that favors nucleophilic substitution reactions. Nitrite formation during DNAN decay confirmed a denitration pathway, whereas demethylation, the preferred pathway in homogeneous solution, produces 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP). Denitration catalyzed by PCM is advantageous to demethylation because nitrite is less toxic than DNAN and DNP. These findings provide critical insights for reactive adsorbent design that has broad implications for catalyst design and pollutant abatement.

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