Ciprofloxacin Degradation with Persulfate Activated with the Synergistic Effect of the Activated Carbon and Cobalt Dual Catalyst

The antibiotic level in the aquatic environment has reached threatening levels for human health and ecosystems. Therefore, it is of vital importance to effectively treat antibiotic-containing wastewater. Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), especially heterogeneous catalytic processes, are considere...

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Veröffentlicht in:Arabian journal for science and engineering (2011) 2023-07, Vol.48 (7), p.8401-8415
Hauptverfasser: Erdem, Hatice, Erdem, Mehmet
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The antibiotic level in the aquatic environment has reached threatening levels for human health and ecosystems. Therefore, it is of vital importance to effectively treat antibiotic-containing wastewater. Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), especially heterogeneous catalytic processes, are considered the most effective process to treat the residual antibiotics in the wastewaters. In the AOPs, activated carbon-supported catalysts have a synergistic effect thanks to the more effective surface area and by transferring electrons to generate radicals through sp 2 covalent carbon bond and oxygen functional groups. In this study, oxidative degradation of ciprofloxacin (CIP) in water by persulfate (PS) activated with an activated carbon-supported cobalt-based dual catalyst (Co-AC) synthesized from biomass mixture and cobalt chloride via chemical activation and pyrolysis was examined. The effects of catalyst dosage, contact time, pH, PS concentration and temperature on the performance of the catalyst were investigated in detail. The synergistic effect of the system depending on various combinations (CIP + PS, CIP + Co-AC, CIP + PS + Co-AC) was determined. Co-AC exhibited high catalytic activity in the CIP oxidation with PS activation, even in various water matrices containing some anions such as Cl − , SO 4 2− and NO 3 − . CIP in the solution could be completely degraded within 120 min in the presence of 0.75 g/L catalyst, 2 mM PS at 25 °C without any pH adjustment. Quenching experiments showed that the Co-AC dual catalyst successfully activated PS to generate SO 4 •− and •OH radicals, but the SO 4 •− was more dominant on the CIP degradation. Kinetic analysis of experimental data revealed that the CIP degradation reaction fits the pseudo-first-order kinetics with an activation energy of 62.69 kJ/mol.
ISSN:2193-567X
1319-8025
2191-4281
DOI:10.1007/s13369-022-06907-1