Abstract
This study investigates the degradation of nifedipine (NIF) by using a novel and highly efficient ultraviolet light combined with hydrogen peroxide (UV/H2O2). The degradation rate and degradation kinetics of NIF first increased and then remained constant as the H2O2 dose increased, and the quasi-percolation threshold was an H2O2 dose of 0.378 mmol/L. An increase in the initial pH and divalent anions (SO42- and CO32-) resulted in a linear decrease of NIF (the R2 of the initial pH, SO42- and CO32- was 0.6884, 0.9939 and 0.8589, respectively). The effect of monovalent anions was complex; Cl- and NO3- had opposite effects: low Cl- or high NO3- promoted degradation, and high Cl- or low NO3- inhibited the degradation of NIF. The degradation rate and kinetics constant of NIF via UV/H2O2 were 99.94% and 1.45569 min-1, respectively, and the NIF concentration = 5 mg/L, pH = 7, the H2O2 dose = 0.52 mmol/L, T = 20 ℃ and the reaction time = 5 min. The ·OH was the primary key reactive oxygen species (ROS) and ·O2- was the secondary key ROS. There were 11 intermediate products (P345, P329, P329-2, P315, P301, P274, P271, P241, P200, P181 and P158) and 2 degradation pathways (dehydrogenation of NIF → P345 → P274 and dehydration of NIF → P329 → P315).
Highlights
Water pollution is a major environmental problem the world is facing today, mainly due to modernization [1]
The results indicated that the photodecomposition kinetics of NIF are zero-order at the beginning of the reaction
The H2O2 dose significantly affects the oxidative degradation of antibiotics by controlling the generation rate of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and the effect of H2O2 dose has been shown to have a dual nature
Summary
Water pollution is a major environmental problem the world is facing today, mainly due to modernization [1]. The removal of toxic organic pollutants discharged from the ever-increasing number of industries is a major environmental goal [2,3]. Nifedipine (NIF, Fig 1), 3,5-dimethyl 2,6-dimethyl-4-(2-nitrophenyl)-1,4-dihydropyridine-3,5-dicarboxylate, belongs to the dihydropyridine class of calcium channel antagonists and is one of the most useful pharmaceuticals for the treatment of hypertension, angina pectoris and other cardiovascular. Efficient UV/H2O2 technology for the removal of nifedipine antibiotics
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