Abstract
Two Fe/AC catalysts prepared with different iron precursors (iron nitrate and iron pentacarbonyl) and the same AC support have been tested in H(2)O(2) decomposition in presence and absence of methanol, a known strong scavenger of hydroxyl radicals, to investigate the selectivity towards .OH formation in this reaction and their behavior in the CWPO of phenol. The catalyst prepared with iron nitrate, with the most oxidized surface and the highest Fe surface content, seems to favor a higher selectivity towards .OH formation in CWPO allowing for complete phenol conversion and a significant TOC removal, with the highest mineralization degree at 50 degrees C and atmospheric pressure. Fe/AC catalysts were more efficient in the CWPO of phenol than in methanol presence due to a better use of the oxidant since adsorbed phenol on catalyst surface minimizes inefficient H(2)O(2) decomposition to H(2)O and O(2)(g). The influence of the initial H(2)O(2) concentration on phenol oxidation with this catalyst was also studied. A theoretical stoichiometric amount of H(2)O(2) for complete oxidation of phenol was chosen as the best starting concentration since auto-scavenging reactions can be minimized and it is sufficient for oxidizing phenol and the aromatic intermediates.
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