| Literature DB >> 32162726 |
Jiang Xu1,2, Astrid Avellan1,2, Hao Li3, Xitong Liu1, Vincent Noël4, Zimo Lou1, Yan Wang5, Rälf Kaegi6, Graeme Henkelman3, Gregory V Lowry1,2.
Abstract
Sulfidized nanoscale zerovalent iron (SNZVI) is a promising material for groundwater remediation. However, the relationships between sulfur content and speciation and the properties of SNZVI materials are unknown, preventing rational design. Here, the effects of sulfur on the crystalline structure, hydrophobicity, sulfur speciation, corrosion potential, and electron transfer resistance are determined. Sulfur incorporation extended the nano-Fe0 BCC lattice parameter, reduced the Fe local vacancies, and lowered the resistance to electron transfer. Impacts of the main sulfur species (FeS and FeS2 ) on hydrophobicity (water contact angles) are consistent with density functional theory calculations for these FeSx phases. These properties well explain the reactivity and selectivity of SNZVI during the reductive dechlorination of trichloroethylene (TCE), a hydrophobic groundwater contaminant. Controlling the amount and speciation of sulfur in the SNZVI made it highly reactive (up to 0.41 L m-2 d-1 ) and selective for TCE degradation over water (up to 240 moles TCE per mole H2 O), with an electron efficiency of up to 70%, and these values are 54-fold, 98-fold, and 160-fold higher than for NZVI, respectively. These findings can guide the rational design of robust SNZVI with properties tailored for specific application scenarios.Entities:
Keywords: environmental nanotechnology; groundwater remediation; rational design; sulfidized nanoscale zerovalent iron; sulfur speciation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32162726 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201906910
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849