Diversity of Contaminant Reduction Reactions by Zerovalent Iron: Role of the Reductate
- 21 November 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Environmental Science & Technology
- Vol. 38 (1) , 139-147
- https://doi.org/10.1021/es034237h
Abstract
The reactions of eight model contaminants with nine types of granular Fe(0) were studied in batch experiments using consistent experimental conditions. The model contaminants (herein referred to as “reductates” because they were reduced by the iron metal) included cations (Cu2+), anions (CrO42-, NO3-, and 5,5‘,7,7‘-indigotetrasulfonate), and neutral species (2-chloroacetophenone, 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene, carbon tetrachloride, and trichloroethene). The diversity of this range of reductates offers a uniquely broad perspective on the reactivity of Fe(0). Rate constants for disappearance of the reductates vary over as much as four orders of magnitude for particular reductates (due to differences in the nine types of iron) but differences among the reductates were even larger, ranging over almost seven orders of magnitude. Various ways of summarizing the data all suggest that relative reactivities with Fe(0) vary in the order Cu2+, 5,5‘,7,7‘-indigotetrasulfonate > 2-chloroacetophenone, 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene > carbon tetrachloride, CrO42- > trichloroethene > NO3-. Although the reductate has the largest effect on disappearance kinetics, more subtle differences in reactivity due to the type of Fe(0) suggests that removal of CrO22- and NO3- (the inorganic anions) involves adsorption to oxides on the Fe(0), whereas the disappearance kinetics of all other types of reductants is favored by reduction on comparatively oxide-free metal. Correlation analysis of the disappearance rate constants using descriptors of the reductates calculated by molecular modeling (energies of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbitals, LUMO, highest occupied molecular orbitals, HOMO, and HOMO−LUMO gaps) showed that reactivities generally decrease with increasing ELUMO and increasing EGAP (and, therefore, increasing chemical hardness η).Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Correlation Analysis of Rate Constants for Dechlorination by Zero-Valent IronEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1998
- 6-31G* basis set for atoms K through ZnThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1998
- Kinetics of Nitroaromatic Reduction on Granular Iron in Recirculating Batch ExperimentsEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1998
- Photoeffects on the Reduction of Carbon Tetrachloride by Zero-Valent IronThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 1998
- DDT, DDD, and DDE Dechlorination by Zero-Valent IronEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1997
- Treatment of 1,2-dibromo-3-chloropropane and nitrate-contaminated water with zero-valent iron or hydrogen/palladium catalystsWater Research, 1996
- Reduction of Nitro Aromatic Compounds by Zero-Valent Iron MetalEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1995
- Sorption of Trichloroethylene and Tetrachloroethylene in a Batch Reactive Metallic Iron-Water SystemEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1995
- Reductive Dehalogenation of Chlorinated Methanes by Iron MetalEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1994
- Optimization of Gaussian-type basis sets for local spin density functional calculations. Part I. Boron through neon, optimization technique and validationCanadian Journal of Chemistry, 1992