Photoinduced Reductive Decomposition of Perflurooctanoic Acid in Water: Effect of Temperature and Ionic Strength

Zhang, C; Qu, Yan; Zhao, X; Zhou, Qi

HERO ID

3858431

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2015

Language

English

PMID

223228

HERO ID 3858431
In Press No
Year 2015
Title Photoinduced Reductive Decomposition of Perflurooctanoic Acid in Water: Effect of Temperature and Ionic Strength
Authors Zhang, C; Qu, Yan; Zhao, X; Zhou, Qi
Journal CLEAN - Soil, Air, Water
Volume 43
Issue 2
Page Numbers 223-228
Abstract Aqueous photo-reductive decomposition of perflurooctanoic acid (PFOA) was investigated as a function of temperature (293, 298, and 313K) and ionic strength (2.5, 5.0, or 20.0mmol/L as NaCl). As an advanced reduction process, iodide was used under UV irradiation to produce highly reactive reducing reagent hydrated electrons. PFOA was reduced by hydrated electrons and short-chain perfluorinated acid intermediates including perfluoroheptanoic acid, perfluorohexanoic acid, perfluoropentanoic acid, perfluorobutyric acid, pentafluoropropionic acid, and trifluoroacetic acid were detected during the reaction. In this study, the same intermediates were observed under different temperature and ionic strength conditions. It was found that the increase of reaction temperature could positively affect the decomposition of PFOA. Defluorination of PFOA was observed to increase as the temperature increased. After 6h, the defluorination efficiency increased from 47.71% to 80.91% when the system temperature increased from 293 to 313K. As the temperature increased, the maximum concentration of the six short-chain perfluorinated acid intermediates decreased. Meanwhile, there was a positive correlation between the ionic strength and PFOA decomposition rate. According to the BrOnsted-Bjerrum equation, Z(A)Z(B) was calculated to be 2.2, indicating that both single-charged and double-charged species play a role during the decomposition process.
Doi 10.1002/clen.201300869
Pmid 223228
Wosid WOS:000349218800010
Url https://search.proquest.com/docview/1650213381?accountid=171501
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Defluorination mechanism; Hydrated electrons; Thermodynamics; UV-irradiation