| Literature DB >> 10643637 |
Abstract
The sonolysis of 4-nitrophenol in argon-saturated aqueous solution has been studied at 321 kHz. In order to evaluate separately the effect of OH radicals that are formed in the cavitational bubble and part of which react in the aqueous phase with this substrate, radiolytic studies in N2O-saturated solutions were carried out for comparison. A detailed product study of the sonolysis of 4-nitrophenol solutions shows that at pH 10, where 4-nitrophenol is deprotonated (pKa = 7.1), its sonolytic degradation is fully accounted for by OH-radical-induced reactions in the aqueous phase. At this pH, the sonolytic yield of H2O2 resulting from OH radical recombination in the solution, measured as a function of the 4-nitrophenol concentration, is reduced in line with the scavenging capacity of the 4-nitrophenolate. In contrast, at pH 4 the formation of H2O2 is already fully suppressed when the solution is 7 x 10(-4) mol dm-3 in 4-nitrophenol, and oxidative-pyrolytic degradation predominates, as exemplified by the large yields of CO and CO2 which are accompanied by a large H2 yield. The basis of this difference in behavior is a hydrophobic enrichment of 4-nitrophenol (which is undissociated at pH 4) at the interface of the cavitational bubble by a factor of about 80. The pH dependence of the yields of the pyrolytic products reflects the hydrolytic equilibrium concentration of 4-nitrophenol. The paper also demonstrates that the complexity of this sonochemical system precludes its use a gauge to determine the temperature in the interior of the cavitational bubble.Entities:
Year: 2000 PMID: 10643637 DOI: 10.1016/s1350-4177(99)00018-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ultrason Sonochem ISSN: 1350-4177 Impact factor: 7.491