Abstract

Manganese dioxide (MnO2) is attracting significant attention in the activation of persulfate for the degradation of organic pollutants in water. But the factor determining the catalytic efficiency of MnO2, and the evolution of reactive oxygen species (ROS) remain equivocal and elusive. Herein, three-dimensional (3D) hierarchical MnO2 nanostructures are synthesized via the calcination of hydrothermal product and used to active peroxymonosulfate (PMS) for degradation of acid orange 7 (AO7) in water. The results show that the calcination temperature can tune the morphology of 3D hierarchical MnO2 nanostructures from flower to urchin-like as well as phase transformation from δ-MnO2 to α-MnO2. Owing to the presence of more surface defects and surface adsorbed oxygen species, the urchin-like α-MnO2 nanostructures prepared at 500 °C (MnO2-500) deliver the best catalytic activity in activation of PMS, and 98.3 % of AO7 is degraded in 300 s. Additionally, the MnO2-500 shows wide pH applicability (3.5–9.6). Quenching tests and electron paramagnetic resonance spectra reveal that the catalytic oxidation of AO7 in the MnO2-500/PMS system is mainly mediated by the non-radical pathway, and the dominated ROS is 1O2. Besides, electrochemical experiment confirms the presence of electron transfer in the catalytic process. Density functional theory calculations indicate that the CN and CS groups of AO7 with high electron density are easily attacked by electrophilic ROS, which is further confirmed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Finally, MnO2-500 exhibits gradually enhanced catalytic activity with the increased cycle number due to the increased surface defects and the surface adsorbed oxygen. This study provides new insight into the PMS activation by MnO2-based catalyst for the remediation of organic pollutants in water.

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