Non-radical activation of H2O2 by surface-disordered WO3 for efficient and selective pollutant degradation with weak matrix effects
2020
Zhang, Ai-Yong | Zhao, Pin-Cheng | He, Yuan-Yi | Zhou, Yang | Feng, Jing-Wei
Heterogeneous catalysis is promising for water treatment. Solid catalysts play governing roles. Herein, the surface-disordered WO₃, D-WO₃, engineered with surface and sub-surface defective sites from NaBH₄ reduction was proven to be an effective catalyst for H₂O₂ activation. The defective degree and defects amount on WO₃ were regulated by NaBH₄. More than 95% of two typical azo dyes, RhB and MG, were selectively degraded in D-WO₃/H₂O₂ system during 3.0 h, while no significant activity was observed for MO as well as bisphenol A, roxarsone, phenol, 4-chlorophenol, p-nitrophenol, o-aminophenol, urea, and 2,4-dichlorophenol in comparison under the identical conditions (mainly less than 20%). Both ESR and radical scavenging tests indicated the minor role of ·OH from H₂O₂ activation on D-WO₃. The superior activity of D-WO₃ could be mainly attributed to the surface and sub-surface defects with finely tailored local atomic configurations and electronic structures of central metal sites. Surface and sub-surface defective sites could serve as the reactive sites of interfacial adsorption, dissociative activation, and catalytic decomposition for both oxidant and pollutants, with high adsorption energy, strong structural activation, and superior catalytic activity. Our findings provided a new chance for non-selective radical catalysis based on transition metal oxides and a promising catalyst with high performance, low cost, and no toxicity for pollutant degradation with weak matrix effects in wastewater and surface water.
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