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Electrochemical degradation of nanoplastics in water: Analysis of the role of reactive oxygen species

The Science of The Total Environment 2021 75 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Marthe Kiendrebeogo, M.R. Karimi Estahbanati, Yassine Ouarda, Patrick Drogui, R. D. Tyagi

Summary

Researchers investigated electrochemical methods for degrading nanoplastics in water and analyzed the role of different reactive oxygen species in the process. They found that the electro-peroxidation process was about 2.6 times more effective than standard electrooxidation, achieving up to 86.8% nanoplastic degradation under optimized conditions. The study presents a promising advanced treatment approach for addressing nanoplastic contamination in water.

Microplastics and nanoplastics (NPs) are emerging water contaminants which have recently gained lots of attention because of their effects on the aquatic systems and human life. Most of the previous works on the treatment of plastic pollution in water have been focused on microplastics and a very limited study has been performed on the NPs treatment. In this work, the role of main reactive oxygen species (ROSs) in the electrooxidation (EO) and electro-peroxidation (EO-HO) of NPs in water is investigated. In-situ generation of hydroxyl radicals (OH), persulfates (SO), and hydrogen peroxide (HO) were performed using boron-doped diamond (BDD) as the anode, whereas titanium (in EO process) and carbon felt (CF, in EO-HO process) were used as cathode. In the EO process, NPs were mainly oxidized by two types of ROSs on the BDD surface: (i) OH from water discharge and (ii) SO via SO reaction with OH. In EO-HO process, NPs were additionally degraded by OH formed from HO decomposition as well as SO generated from direct or indirect reactions with HO. Analysis of the degradation of NPs showed that EO-HO process was around 2.6 times more effective than EO process. The optimum amount of NPs degradation efficiency of 86.8% was obtained using EO-HO process at the current density of 36 mA·cm, 0.03 M NaSO, pH of 2, and 40 min reaction time. In addition, 3D EEM fluorescence analysis confirmed the degradation of NPs. Finally, the economic analysis showed the treatment of NPs using EO-HO process had an operating cost of 2.3 $US.m, which was around 10 times less than the EO process. This study demonstrated that the in-situ generation of ROSs can significantly enhance the degradation of NPs in water.

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