Chenxin XieYifan RenYanbiao Liu
Herein, we rationally designed a molecular catalytic filter for effective micropollutants decontamination via peroxymonosulfate (PMS) activation. Specifically, iron phthalocanine (FePc) molecules with defined Fe–N4 coordination were immobilized onto carbon nanotubes (CNTs), forming a hybrid catalyst that integrated molecular precision with heterogeneous catalytic properties. The resulting CNT-FePc filter achieved a 98.4% removal efficiency for bisphenol A (10 ppm) in a single-pass operation system, significantly outperforming the CNT/PMS system without FePc (41.6%). Additionally, the CNT-FePc/PMS system demonstrated remarkable resistance to performance inhibition by common water matrix components. Unlike typical radical-dominated PMS activation processes, mechanistic investigations confirmed that the CNT-FePc/PMS system selectively promoted singlet oxygen (1O2) generation as the primary oxidative pathway. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations revealed that PMS exhibited stronger adsorption on FePc (−3.05 eV) compared to CNT (−2.86 eV), and that FePc effectively facilitated O–O bond elongation in PMS, thereby facilitating 1O2 generation. Additionally, seed germination assays indicated a significant reduction in the biotoxicity of the treated effluents. Overall, this work presents a catalyst design strategy that merges molecular-level coordination chemistry with practical flow-through configuration, enabling rapid, selective, and environmentally benign micropollutant removal.
Ying YanQinxue YangQigao ShangJing AiXiaofang YangDongsheng WangGuiying Liao
Shuai-Pu ZhangFuqiang LiuQuanyuan ChenShengtao JiangFei PanYanbiao Liu
Rui ZhouShuai LiuFangru HeHejun RenZhonghui Han
Jueun LeeQuang Viet LyLele CuiHai Bang TruongYuri ParkYuhoon Hwang
Anahita KhojastegiAmir MokhtareImann MoslehAlireza Abbaspourrad