| Literature DB >> 31561528 |
Francisca Aparicio1, Juan Pablo Escalada2, Eduardo De Gerónimo3, Virginia C Aparicio4, Fernando S García Einschlag5, Giuliana Magnacca6, Luciano Carlos7, Daniel O Mártire8.
Abstract
The use of iron-based nanomaterials for environmental remediation processes has recently received considerable attention. Here, we employed core-shell magnetite-humic acids nanoparticles as a heterogeneous photosensitizer and iron source in photo-Fenton reaction for the degradation of the psychiatric drug carbamazepine (CBZ). CBZ showed low photodegradation rates in the presence of the magnetic nanoparticles, whereas the addition of hydrogen peroxide at pH = 3 to the system drastically increased the abatement of the contaminant. The measured Fe2+ and Fe3+ profiles point to the generation of Fe3+ at the surface of the nanoparticles, indicating a heterogeneous oxidation of the contaminant mediated by hydroxyl radicals. Products with a higher transformation degree were observed in the photo-Fenton procedure and support the attack of the HO• radical on the CBZ molecule. Promising results encourage the use of the nanoparticles as efficient iron sources with enhanced magnet-sensitive properties, suitable for applications in photo-Fenton treatments for the purification of wastewater.Entities:
Keywords: carbamazepine; contaminants of emerging concern; humic acids; magnetite nanoparticles; photo-Fenton
Year: 2019 PMID: 31561528 PMCID: PMC6836229 DOI: 10.3390/nano9101379
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1(A) Photodegradation of carbamazepine (CBZ) in the presence and in the absence of Fe3O4/Leonardite humic acid (LHA). (CBZ)0 = 2 mg L−1; (Fe3O4/LHA)0 = 500 mg L−1; pH 6.0. (B) Values of kobs obtained for the photodegradation of CBZ solution for different initial concentrations of Fe3O4/LHA nanoparticles. (CBZ)0 = 2 mg L−1; pH 6.0.
Figure 2Normalized CBZ degradation under different experimental conditions. (CBZ)0 = 2 mg L−1; (Fe3O4/LHA)0 = 500 mg L−1, (Fe3O4)0 = 500 mg L−1, (H2O2)0 = 0.15 mM, (2-propanol)0 = 0.1 M when it is indicated.
Figure 3Fe3+ profiles measured in the absence and in the presence of H2O2, with and without the nanoparticle’s separation step. (CBZ)0 = 2 mg L−1; (Fe3O4/LHA)0 = 500 mg L−1; (H2O2)0 = 0.015 mM; pH 3.0.
Figure 4CBZ degradation in the presence of Fe3O4-LHA and H2O2 after several 10 min-cycles of UV irradiation. (CBZ)0 = 2 mg L−1; (Fe3O4/LHA)0 = 500 mg L−1; (H2O2)0 = 0.15 mM, pH = 3.0.
CBZ photodegradation products detected by UPLC-MS-MS.
| Product Number | Formula | Molecular Ions (M + H)+, ( | Specific Fragments ( | Type of Treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | B | ||||
| I |
| 255 | 237 | √ | |
| II |
| 267 | 249 | √ | |
| III |
| 253 | 210, 180 | √ | √ |
| IV |
| 224 | 196 | √ | |
| V |
| 251 | 223, 208, 180 | √ | |
| VI |
| 196 | 167, 168 | √ | |
| VII |
| 196 | 167, 168 | √ | |
(A) CBZ solution (2 mg L−1) irradiated 24 h in the presence of Fe3O4-LHA (500 mg L−1) at pH 3.0. (B) CBZ solution (2 mg L−1) irradiated 30 min in the presence of Fe3O4-LHA (500 mg L−1) and H2O2 (0.15 mm) at pH 3.0.
Figure 5CBZ degradation pathways photo-induced by Fe3O4/LHA in the absence (A) and presence (B) of H2O2.