Abstract

Contamination of herbicides such as atrazine (ATZ) poses a significant threat to human health and aquatic ecosystem. In this study, we demonstrated that heat-activated persulfate could effectively degrade ATZ in water. Complete disappearance of 50μM ATZ could be obtained after 2h reaction in the presence of 1mM persulfate under 60°C. Increasing the initial persulfate concentration or temperature significantly enhanced the degradation efficiency. Natural organic matter (NOM) decreased the degradation rate, but complete removal of ATZ could still be obtained. The presence of chloride (Cl−) and bicarbonate (HCO3−) had little effects on ATZ degradation at lower concentration (e.g., 5mM). However, inhibitory effects were observed when concentrations of Cl− and HCO3− increased (e.g., 100mM). Radical scavenging test revealed that sulfate radical (SO4−) was the predominant radical species at acidic to neutral pH, while hydroxyl radical (HO) was predominant at basic pH. Eight intermediates and products were identified by applying solid phase extraction and liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (SPE-LC–MS/MS) techniques. Transformation pathways including dealkylation, alkyl chain oxidation, and dechlorination–hydroxylation were proposed, and the underlying mechanisms for each pathway were systematically analyzed.

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