Effect of inorganic and organic solutes on zero-valent aluminum-activated hydrogen peroxide and persulfate oxidation of bisphenol A

Idil Arslan-Alaton*, Tugba Olmez-Hanci, Tugce Ozturk

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The effect of varying inorganic (chloride, nitrate, sulfate, and phosphate) and organic (represented by humic acid) solutes on the removal of aqueous micropollutant bisphenol A (BPA; 8.8 μM; 2 mg/L) with the oxidizing agents hydrogen peroxide (HP; 0.25 mM) and persulfate (PS; 0.25 mM) activated using zero-valent aluminum (ZVA) nanoparticles (1 g/L) was investigated at a pH of 3. In the absence of the solutes, the PS/ZVA treatment system was superior to the HP/ZVA system in terms of BPA removal rates and kinetics. Further, the HP/ZVA process was not affected by nitrate (50 mg/L) addition, whereas chloride (250 mg/L) exhibited no effect on the PS/ZVA process. The negative effect of inorganic anions on BPA removal generally speaking increased with increasing charge in the following order: NO3 (no inhibition) < Cl (250 mg/L) = SO4 2− < PO4 3− for HP/ZVA and Cl (250 mg/L; no inhibition) < NO3 < SO4 2− < PO4 3− for PS/ZVA. Upon addition of 20 mg/L humic acid representing natural organic matter, BPA removals decreased from 72 and 100% in the absence of solutes to 24 and 57% for HP/ZVA and PS/ZVA treatments, respectively. The solute mixture containing all inorganic and organic solutes together partly suppressed the inhibitory effects of phosphate and humic acid on BPA removals decreasing to 46 and 43% after HP/ZVA and PS/ZVA treatments, respectively. Dissolved organic carbon removals were obtained in the range of 30 and 47% (the HP/ZVA process), as well as 47 and 57% (the PS/ZVA process) for the experiments in the presence of 20 mg/L humic acid and solute mixture, respectively. The relative Vibrio fischeri photoluminescence inhibition decreased particularly for the PS/ZVA treatment system, which exhibited a higher treatment performance than the HP/ZVA treatment system.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)34938-34949
Number of pages12
JournalEnvironmental Science and Pollution Research
Volume25
Issue number35
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2018

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

Funding

Funding information The authors are grateful to Istanbul Technical University Research Foundation for the financial support under Project No. 39463 and No. 39547.

FundersFunder number
Istanbul Technical University Research Foundation39463, 39547

    Keywords

    • Acute toxicity
    • Bisphenol A
    • Hydrogen peroxide
    • Inorganic and organic water components
    • Persulfate
    • Zero-valent aluminum

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