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Quantitative Profiling of Elementary Reaction Steps in Sulfate Radical-Based Treatment Processes: A Two-Loop Self-Consistent Approach

Kanying Miu, Yunxiang Meng, Yiqi Yan, Zongsu Wei, Jannis Wenk, Ruiyang Xiao

2025Environmental Science & Technology9 citationsDOI

Abstract

Advanced oxidation processes involve radical-induced reactions to degrade organic contaminants, and understanding their reaction mechanisms is essential for optimizing and controlling treatment performance. However, the transient nature and complex kinetics of radical systems, characterized by highly branched pathways, make full quantitative mechanism elucidation challenging. Here, the decay kinetics of sulfate and carbonate radicals (SO 4 •– and CO 3 •– ) were investigated through direct testing of mechanistic hypotheses against observations from time-resolved spectroscopy with a two-loop self-consistent approach. We found that four elementary reactions (SO 4 •– self-termination and reactions with persulfate PS, H 2 O, and hydroxyl radical • OH) dominate the decay kinetics of SO 4 •– in UV/PS systems. In the presence of HCO 3 – near neutral solutions, the kinetics of CO 3 •– can be described by its self-termination reaction alone. For comparison, in UV/H 2 O 2 /HCO 3 – systems, two elementary reactions (CO 3 •– self-termination and its reaction with H 2 O 2 ) dictate the chemical dynamics of CO 3 •– . This differential involvement results in 2 orders of magnitude discrepancy in the CO 3 •– lifetime (9.07 ms and 70.2 μs, respectively) between the two systems. For the first time, direct evidence was presented to discern the elementary reactions involved and quantify the contribution of each elementary reaction to overall radical consumption.

Topics & Concepts

Profiling (computer programming)SulfateChemistryComputer scienceOrganic chemistryProgramming languageAdvanced oxidation water treatmentElectrochemical Analysis and ApplicationsWater Quality Monitoring and Analysis