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On peroxymonosulfate-based treatment of saline wastewater: when phosphate and chloride co-exist

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posted on 2025-05-09, 15:36 authored by Bo Sheng, Ying Huang, Zhaohui WangZhaohui Wang, Fei Yang, Luoyan Ai, Jianshe Liu
Both chloride and phosphate are common inorganic anions in industrial wastewater, however, their effects on peroxymonosulfate (PMS)-based oxidation systems are largely unknown. The present results show that addition of chloride ( > 1 mM) apparently enhanced the degradation of Acid Orange 7 (AO7) independent of the presence of phosphate (PBS) buffer. Both PBS and chloride favored the degradation of AO7, while PBS played a more important role when they co-existed. The degradation efficiency of AO7 was enhanced by increasing the concentration of PBS and chloride. A maximum of absorbable organic halides (AOX) accumulation was observed; indicating some chlorinated byproducts could be initially generated and further oxidized by increasing the reaction time. It is demonstrated that the PBS/PMS system, with a lower AOX formation at the same chloride concentration, is superior to the Co/PMS system, a typical sulfate radical-based system. The active chlorine species (HClO/Cl₂) were found to be the dominant oxidants in the presence of higher chloride concentration ( > 50 mM) under neutral conditions. The findings of this work may promote the further application of PMS-based oxidation processes in saline effluents treatment.

History

Journal title

RSC Advances

Volume

8

Issue

25

Pagination

13865-13870

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science

School

School of Environmental and Life Sciences

Rights statement

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported Licence.

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