Yirong Zhao, Junxia Su, Bingqi Zhou, Fujie Li, Kang Mao, Muhammad Umair, Guopei Huang, Hua Zhang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Mitigating antibiotic pollution is essential to combating antibiotic resistance, safeguarding ecosystems, ensuring food and water safety, and preserving the efficacy of antibiotics. Simultaneously, the comprehensive utilization of red mud is a key approach to reducing resource waste and ecological damage. This study investigates the use of iron components from red mud to prepare RM-nZVI/Ni for Fenton-like reactions, aimed at degrading antibiotics in water. By leveraging the inherent iron content in red mud, RM-nZVI/Ni was developed to achieve a dual-purpose environmental strategy: antibiotic degradation and solid waste resource recycling. The results demonstrate that 0.02 g/L of sulfamethoxazole (SMX) can be fully degraded within 15 min using 0.1 g/L of RM-nZVI/Ni and 6 mM of H2O2. Hydroxyl radicals (·OH) and Ni were identified as key contributors to SMX removal. Moreover, this system exhibits universality in degrading common antibiotics such as LFX, NFX, CIP, and TC. LC-MS analysis and DFT theoretical calculations indicate that the degradation byproducts are of lower toxicity or are non-toxic. Additionally, cost analysis suggests that RM-nZVI/Ni is a cost-effective and efficient catalyst. This research gives valuable insights into antibiotic degradation using red mud-based catalysts and offers guidance for expanding the high-value applications of red mud.
期刊介绍:
Molecules (ISSN 1420-3049, CODEN: MOLEFW) is an open access journal of synthetic organic chemistry and natural product chemistry. All articles are peer-reviewed and published continously upon acceptance. Molecules is published by MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Our aim is to encourage chemists to publish as much as possible their experimental detail, particularly synthetic procedures and characterization information. There is no restriction on the length of the experimental section. In addition, availability of compound samples is published and considered as important information. Authors are encouraged to register or deposit their chemical samples through the non-profit international organization Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI). Molecules has been launched in 1996 to preserve and exploit molecular diversity of both, chemical information and chemical substances.